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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 b- and delta-subunits of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
are critical for binding ECF1 to the F0 part, and appear to constitute the stator necessary for holding the alpha3beta3 hexamer as the c-epsilon-gamma domain rotates during catalysis. Previous studies have determined that the b-subunits are dimeric for a large part of their length, and interact with the F1 part through the delta-subunit (Rodgers, A. J. W., Wilkens, S., Aggeler, R., Morris, M. B., Howitt, S. M., and Capaldi, R. A. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 31058-31064). To further study b-subunit interactions, three mutants were constructed in which Ser-84,
Ala
-144, and Leu-156, respectively, were replaced by Cys. Treatment of purified ECF1F0 from all three mutants with CuCl2 induced disulfide formation resulting in b-subunit dimer cross-link products. In addition, the mutant bL156C formed a cross-link from a b-subunit to an alpha-subunit via alphaCys90. Neither b-b nor b-alpha cross-linking had significant effect on ATPase activities in any of the mutants. Proton pumping activities were measured in inner membranes from the three mutants. Dimerization of the b-subunit did not effect proton pumping in mutants bS84C or bA144C. In the mutant bL156C, CuCl2 treatment reduced proton pumping markedly, probably because of uncoupling caused by the b-alpha cross-link formation. The results show that the alpha-subunit forms part of the binding site on ECF1 for the b2delta domain and that the b-subunit extends all the way from the membrane to the top of the F1 structure. Some conformational flexibility in the connection between the second stalk and F1 appears to be required for coupled catalysis.
...
PMID:The second stalk composed of the b- and delta-subunits connects F0 to F1 via an alpha-subunit in the Escherichia coli ATP synthase. 979 43
The structure of the subunit c oligomer of the H+-transporting
ATP synthase
of Escherichia coli has been modeled by molecular dynamics and energy minimization calculations from the solution structure of monomeric subunit c and 21 intersubunit distance constraints derived from cross-linking of subunits. Subunit c folds in a hairpin-like structure with two transmembrane helices. In the c12 oligomer model, the subunits pack to form a compact hollow cylinder with an outer diameter of 55-60 A and an inner space with a minimal diameter of 11-12 A. Phospholipids are presumed to pack in the inner space in the native membrane. The transmembrane helices pack in two concentric rings with helix 1 inside and helix 2 outside. The calculations strongly favor this structure versus a model with helix 2 inside and helix 1 outside. Asp-61, the H+-transporting residue, packs toward the center of the four transmembrane helices of two interacting subunits. From this position at the front face of one subunit, the Asp-61 carboxylate lies proximal to side chains of
Ala
-24, Ile-28, and
Ala
-62, projecting from the back face of a second subunit. These interactions were predicted from previous mutational analyses. The packing supports the suggestion that a c-c dimer is the functional unit. The positioning of the Asp-61 carboxyl in the center of the interacting transmembrane helices, rather than at the periphery of the cylinder, has important implications regarding possible mechanisms of H+-transport-driven rotation of the c oligomer during ATP synthesis.
...
PMID:Structure of the subunit c oligomer in the F1Fo ATP synthase: model derived from solution structure of the monomer and cross-linking in the native enzyme. 1039 99
In the crystal structure of the mitochondrial F(1)-ATPase, the beta-Thr(163) residue was identified as a ligand to Mg(2+) and the beta-Glu(188) as directly involved in catalysis. We replaced the equivalent beta-Thr(159) of the chromatophore F(0)F(1)
ATP synthase
of Rhodospirillum rubrum with Ser,
Ala
, or Val and the Glu(184) with Gln or Lys. The mutant beta subunits were isolated and tested for their capacity to assemble into a beta-less chromatophore F(0)F(1) and restore its lost activities. All of them were found to bind into the beta-less enzyme with the same efficiency as the wild type beta subunit, but only the beta-Thr(159) --> Ser mutant restored the activity of the assembled enzyme. These results indicate that both Thr(159) and Glu(184) are not required for assembly and that Glu(184) is indeed essential for all the membrane-bound chromatophore F(0)F(1) activities. A detailed comparison between the wild type and the beta-Thr(159) --> Ser mutant revealed a rather surprising difference. Although this mutant restored the wild type levels and all specific properties of this F(0)F(1) proton-coupled ATP synthesis as well as Mg- and Mn-dependent ATP hydrolysis, it did not restore at all the proton-decoupled CaATPase activity. This clear difference between the ligands for Mg(2+) and Mn(2+), where threonine can be replaced by serine, and Ca(2+), where only threonine is active, suggests that the beta-subunit catalytic site has different conformational states when occupied by Ca(2+) as compared with Mg(2+). These different states might result in different interactions between the beta and gamma subunits, which are involved in linking F(1) catalysis with F(0) proton-translocation and can thus explain the complete absence of Ca-dependent proton-coupled F(0)F(1) catalytic activity.
...
PMID:Mutations in the beta-subunit Thr(159) and Glu(184) of the Rhodospirillum rubrum F(0)F(1) ATP synthase reveal differences in ligands for the coupled Mg(2+)- and decoupled Ca(2+)-dependent F(0)F(1) activities. 1062 25
The three catalytic sites of the F(O)F(1)
ATP synthase
interact through a cooperative mechanism that is required for the promotion of catalysis. Replacement of the conserved alpha subunit Arg-376 in the Escherichia coli F(1) catalytic site with
Ala
or Lys resulted in turnover rates of ATP hydrolysis that were 2 x 10(3)-fold lower than that of the wild type. Mutant enzymes catalyzed hydrolysis at a single site with kinetics similar to that of the wild type; however, addition of excess ATP did not chase bound ATP, ADP, or Pi from the catalytic site, indicating that binding of ATP to the second and third sites failed to promote release of products from the first site. Direct monitoring of nucleotide binding in the alphaR376A and alphaR376K mutant F(1) by a tryptophan in place of betaTyr-331 (Weber et al. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 20126-20133) showed that the catalytic sites of the mutant enzymes, like the wild type, have different affinities and therefore, are structurally asymmetric. These results indicate that alphaArg-376, which is close to the beta- or gamma-phosphate group of bound ADP or ATP, respectively, does not make a significant contribution to the catalytic reaction, but coordination of the arginine to nucleotide filling the low-affinity sites is essential for promotion of rotational catalysis to steady-state turnover.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli ATP synthase alpha subunit Arg-376: the catalytic site arginine does not participate in the hydrolysis/synthesis reaction but is required for promotion to the steady state. 1070 30
In an earlier study, the ATP10 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was shown to code for an inner membrane protein required for assembly of the F(0) sector of the
mitochondrial ATPase
complex (Ackerman, S., and Tzagoloff, A. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 9952-9959). To gain additional insights into the function of Atp10p, we have analyzed a revertant of an atp10 null mutant that displays partial recovery of oligomycin-sensitive ATPase and of respiratory competence. The suppressor mutation in the revertant has been mapped to the OLI2 locus in mitochondrial DNA and shown to be a single base change in the C-terminal coding region of the gene. The mutation results in the substitution of a valine for an
alanine
at residue 249 of subunit 6 of the ATPase. The ability of the subunit 6 mutation to compensate for the absence of Atp10p implies a functional interaction between the two proteins. Such an interaction is consistent with evidence indicating that the C-terminal region with the site of the mutation and the extramembrane domain of Atp10p are both on the matrix side of the inner membrane. Subunit 6 has been purified from the parental wild type strain, from the atp10 null mutant, and from the revertant. The N-terminal sequences of the three proteins indicated that they all start at Ser(11), the normal processing site of the subunit 6 precursor. Mass spectral analysis of the wild type and mutants subunit 6 failed to reveal any substantive difference of the wild type and mutant proteins when the mass of the latter was corrected for
Ala
--> Val mutation. These data argue against a role of Atp10p in post-translational modification of subunit 6. Although post-translational modification of another ATPase subunit interacting with subunit 6 cannot be excluded, a more likely function for Atp10p is that it acts as a subunit 6 chaperone during F(0) assembly.
...
PMID:A single amino acid change in subunit 6 of the yeast mitochondrial ATPase suppresses a null mutation in ATP10. 1086 12
The specific accumulation of a hydrophobic protein, subunit c of
ATP synthase
, in lysosomes from the cells of patients with the late infantile form of NCL (LINCL) is caused by a defect in the CLN2 gene product, tripeptidyl peptidase I (TPP-I). The data here show that TPP-I is involved in the initial degradation of subunit c in lysosomes and suggest that its absence leads directly to the lysosomal accumulation of subunit c. The inclusion of a specific inhibitor of TPP-I,
Ala
-
Ala
-Phe-chloromethylketone (AAF-CMK), in the culture medium of normal fibroblasts induced the lysosomal accumulation of subunit c. In an in vitro incubation experiment the addition of AAF-CMK to mitochondrial-lysosomal fractions from normal cells inhibited the proteolysis of subunit c, but not the b-subunit of
ATP synthase
. The use of two antibodies that recognize the aminoterminal and the middle portion of subunit c revealed that the subunit underwent aminoterminal proteolysis, when TPP-I, purified from rat spleen, was added to the mitochondrial fractions. The addition of both purified TPP-I and the soluble lysosomal fractions, which contain various proteinases, to the mitochondrial fractions resulted in rapid degradation of the entire molecule of subunit c, whereas the degradation of subunit c was markedly delayed through the specific inhibition of TPP-I in lysosomal extracts by AAF-CMK. The stable subunit c in the mitochondrial-lysosomal fractions from cells of a patient with LINCL was degraded on incubation with purified TPP-I. The presence of TPP-I led to the sequential cleavage of tripeptides from the N-terminus of the peptide corresponding to the amino terminal sequence of subunit c.
...
PMID:Tripeptidyl peptidase I, the late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis gene product, initiates the lysosomal degradation of subunit c of ATP synthase. 1096 52
The effects of mutation of residue
Ala
-128 of the b subunit of Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
to aspartate on the structure of the subunit and its interaction with the F(1) sector were analyzed. Determination of solution molecular weights by sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation revealed that the A128D mutation had little effect on dimerization in the soluble b construct, b(34-156). However, the mutation caused a structural perturbation detected through both a 12% reduction in the sedimentation coefficient and also a reduced tendency to form intersubunit disulfide bonds between cysteine residues inserted at position 132. Unlike the wild-type sequence, the A128D mutant was unable to interact with F(1)-ATPase. These results indicate that the A128D mutation caused a structural change in the C-terminal region of the protein, preventing the binding to F(1) but having little or no effect on the dimeric nature of b.
...
PMID:A re-examination of the structural and functional consequences of mutation of alanine-128 of the b subunit of Escherichia coli ATP synthase to aspartic acid. 1100 71
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants were subjected to a prolonged period of sulfur-deprivation to characterize molecular and metabolic mechanisms that permit control of primary N-metabolism under these conditions. Prior to the appearance of chlorotic lesions, sulfur-deprived tobacco leaves showed a strong decrease in the sulfate content and changes in foliar enzyme activities, mRNA accumulation and amino-acid pools. The basic amino acids glutamine, asparagine and arginine accumulated in the leaves of sulfur-deprived plants, while the foliar concentrations of aspartate, glutamate, serine or
alanine
remained fairly unchanged. Maximal extractable nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) activity decreased strongly in response to sulfur-deprivation. The decrease in maximal extractable NR activity was accompanied by a decline in NR transcripts while the mRNAs of the plastidic glutamine synthetase (EC 6.1.3.2) or the beta-subunit of the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
were much less affected. Nitrate first accumulated in leaves of tobacco during sulfur-deprivation but then declined. An appreciable amount of nitrate was, however, present in severely sulfur-depleted leaves. The repression of NR gene expression is, therefore, not related to the decrease in the leaf nitrate level. However, glutamine- and/or asparagine-mediated repression of NR gene transcription is a possible mechanism of control in situations when glutamine and asparagine accumulate in leaves and provides a feasible explanation for the reduction in NR activity during sulfur-deprivation. The removal of reduced nitrogen from primary metabolism by redirection and storage as arginine, asparagine or glutamine combined with the down-regulation of nitrate reduction via glutamine- and/or asparagine-mediated repression of NR gene transcription may contribute to maintaining a normal N/S balance during sulfur-deprivation and indicate that the co-ordination of N- and S-metabolism is retained under these conditions.
...
PMID:Negative regulation of nitrate reductase gene expression by glutamine or asparagine accumulating in leaves of sulfur-deprived tobacco. 1103 May 59
In
ATP synthase
(F(O)F(1)-ATPase) ion flow through the membrane-intrinsic portion, F(O), drives the central "rotor", subunits c(10)epsilongamma, relative to the "stator" ab(2)delta(alphabeta)(3). This converts ADP and P(i) into ATP. Vice versa, ATP hydrolysis drives the rotation backwards. Covalent cross-links between rotor and stator subunits have been shown to inhibit these activities. Aiming at the rotary compliance of subunit gamma we introduced disulfide bridges between gamma (rotor) and alpha or beta (stator). We engineered cysteine residues into positions located roughly at the "top," "center," and "bottom" parts of the coiled-coil portion of gamma and suitable residues on alpha or beta. This part of gamma is located at the center of the (alphabeta)(3) domain with its C-terminal part at the top of F(1) and the bottom part close to the F(O) complex. Disulfide bridge formation under oxidizing conditions was quantitative as shown by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. As expected both the ATPase activities and the yield of rotating subunits gamma dropped to zero when the cross-link was formed at the center (gammaL262C <--> alphaA334C) and bottom (gammaCys(87) <--> betaD380C) positions. But much to our surprise disulfide bridging impaired neither ATP hydrolysis activity nor the full rotation of gamma and the enzyme-generated torque of oxidized F(1), which had been engineered at the top position (gammaA285C <--> alphaP280C). Apparently the high torque of this rotary engine uncoiled the alpha-helix and forced amino acids at the C-terminal portion of gamma into full rotation around their dihedral (Ramachandran) angles. This conclusion was supported by molecular dynamics simulations: If gammaCys(285)-Val(286) are attached covalently to (alphabeta)(3) and gammaAla(1)-Ser(281) is forced to rotate, gammaGly(282)-
Ala
(284) can serve as cardan shaft.
...
PMID:F-ATPase: forced full rotation of the rotor despite covalent cross-link with the stator. 1153 65
A deletion and mutagenesis study was performed on the mitochondrial presequence of the beta-subunit of the F(1)-
ATP synthase
from Nicotiana plumbaginifolia linked to the green fluorescent protein (GFP). The various constructs were tested in vivo by transient expression in tobacco protoplasts. GFP distribution in transformed cells was analysed in situ by confocal microscopy, and in vitro in subcellular fractions by Western blotting. Despite its being highly conserved in different species, deletion of the C-terminal region (residues 48-54) of the presequence did not affect mitochondrial import. Deletion of the conserved residues 40-47 and the less conserved intermediate region (residues 18-39) resulted in 60% reduction in GFP import, whereas mutation of conserved residues within these regions had little effect. Further shortening of the presequence progressively reduced import, with the construct retaining the predicted N-terminal amphiphilic alpha-helix (residues 1-12) being unable to mediate mitochondrial import. However, point mutation showed that this last region plays an important role through its basic residues and amphiphilicity, but also through its hydrophobic residues. Replacing Arg4 and Arg5 by
alanine
residues and shifting the Arg5 and Leu6 (in order to disturb amphiphilicity) resulted in reduction of the presequence import efficiency. The most dramatic effects were seen with single or double mutations of the four Leu residues (positions 5, 6, 10 and 11), which resulted in marked reduction or abolition of GFP import, respectively. We conclude that the N-terminal helical structure of the presequence is necessary but not sufficient for efficient mitochondrial import, and that its hydrophobic residues play an essential role in in vivo mitochondrial targeting.
...
PMID:Hydrophobic residues within the predicted N-terminal amphiphilic alpha-helix of a plant mitochondrial targeting presequence play a major role in in vivo import. 1157 37
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