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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)
Nucleotide-depleted
F1-ATPase
from Escherichia coli was reconstituted with F1-depleted membranes and shown to catalyze high rates of oxidative phosphorylation of ADP and GDP. Adenine nucleotide became bound to the nonexchangeable nucleotide sites on membrane-bound F1 during ATP synthesis, but binding of guanine nucleotides to nonexchangeable sites during
GTP
synthesis was not detectable. It was possible to reload the nonexchangeable sites on nucleotide-depleted F1 with radioactive adenine nucleotide prior to membrane reconstitution. The radioactive adenine nucleotide did not exchange significantly during oxidative phosphorylation of ADP or GDP. The amount of nonexchangeable adenine nucleotide found in membrane-bound F1 was the same when the nonexchangeable sites were reloaded either prior to membrane reconstitution of the F1 or after membrane reconstitution with nucleotide-free F1 followed by a burst of oxidative phosphorylation of ADP. The results showed that occupation of the nonexchangeable sites on F1 by tightly bound nucleotide is not required for oxidative phosphorylation of GDP (a physiological activity of F1 in the bacterial cell). Also, the results confirm directly that the adenine-specific nonexchangeable sites on F1 are noncatalytic sites. Using this experimental approach, it was possible to look for a regulatory effect of the nonexchangeable nucleotide on oxidative phosphorylation. Nucleotide-depleted F1 was first reloaded with (i) ATP, (ii) ADP, (iii) 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate, or (iv) zero nucleotide, and was then reconstituted with F1-depleted membranes. The reconstituted membranes were compared in respect to rates of oxidative phosphorylation of GDP and Km values of GDP and Pi. No regulatory role for the nonexchangeable nucleotide was evident.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Catalytic properties of the Escherichia coli proton adenosinetriphosphatase: evidence that nucleotide bound at noncatalytic sites is not involved in regulation of oxidative phosphorylation. 286 99
Mitochondrial
F1-ATPase
from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has been prepared under a stable form and in relatively high amounts by an improved purification procedure. Specific chemical modification of the enzyme by the thiol reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) at pH 6.8 leads to complete inactivation characterized by complex kinetics and pH dependence, indicating that several thiols are related to the enzyme activity. A complete protection against NEM effect is afforded by low concentrations of nucleotides in the presence of Mg2+, with ADP and ATP being more efficient than
GTP
. A total binding of 5 mol of [14C]NEM/mol of
F1-ATPase
is obtained when the enzyme is 85% inactivated: 3 mol of the label are located on the alpha-subunits and 2 on the gamma-subunit. Two out of the 3 mol on the alpha-subunits bind very rapidly before any inactivation occurs, indicating that the two thiols modified are unrelated to the inactivation process. Complete protection by ATP against inactivation by NEM prevents the modification of three essential thiols out of the group of five thiols labeled in the absence of ATP: one is located on a alpha-subunit and two on the gamma-subunit. These two essential thiols of the gamma-subunit can be differentiated by modification with 6,6'-dithiodinicotinic acid (CPDS), another specific thiol reagent. A maximal binding of 4 mol of [14C]CPDS/mol of enzyme is obtained, concomitant to a 25% inhibition. Sequential modification of the enzyme by CPDS and [14C]NEM leads to the same final deep inactivation as that obtained with [14C]NEM alone. One out of the two thiols of the gamma-subunit is no longer accessible to [14C]NEM after CPDS treatment. When incubated at pH 6.8 with [3H]ATP in the presence of Mg2+,
F1-ATPase
is able to bind 3, largely exchangeable, mol of nucleotide/mol of enzyme. Modification of the three essential thiols by NEM dramatically decreases the binding of 3H-nucleotide down to about 1 mol/mol of enzyme. Partial modification modifies the cooperative properties, the enzyme being no longer sensitive to anion activation.
...
PMID:Chemical modification of thiol groups of mitochondrial F1-ATPase from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Involvement of alpha- and gamma-subunits in the enzyme activity. 287 13
Distal urinary acidification is thought to be mediated by a proton ATPase (H+-ATPase). We isolated a plasma membrane fraction from human kidney cortex and medulla which contained H+-ATPase activity. In both the cortex and medulla the plasma membrane fraction was enriched in alkaline phosphatase, maltase, Na+,K+-ATPase and devoid of mitochondrial and lysosomal contamination. In the presence of oligomycin (to inhibit
mitochondrial ATPase
) in the presence of ouabain (to inhibit Na+,K+-ATPase) and in the absence of Ca (to inhibit Ca2+-ATPase) this plasma membrane fraction showed ATPase activity which was sensitive to dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and N-ethylmaleimide. This ATPase activity was also inhibited by vanadate, 4,4'-diisothiocyano-2,2'-disulfonic stilbene and ZnSO4. In the presence of ATP, but not
GTP
or UTP, the plasma membrane fraction of both cortex and medulla was capable of quenching of acridine orange fluorescence, which could be dissipated by nigericin indicating acidification of the interior of the vesicles. The acidification was not affected by presence of oligomycin or ouabain indicating that it was not due to
mitochondrial ATPase
or Na+,K+-ATPase, respectively. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and N-ethylmaleimide completely abolished the acidification by this plasma membrane fraction. In the presence of valinomycin and an outward-directed K gradient, there was increased quenching of acridine orange, indicating that the H+-ATPase is electrogenic. Acidification was not altered by replacement of Na by K, but was critically dependent on the presence of chloride. In summary, the plasma membrane fraction of the human kidney cortex and medulla contains a H+-ATPase, which is similar to the H+-ATPase described in other species, and we postulate that this H+-ATPase may be involved in urinary acidification.
...
PMID:Plasma membrane proton ATPase from human kidney. 287 34
Transport of cytoplasmically synthesized precursor proteins into or across the inner mitochondrial membrane requires a mitochondrial membrane potential. We have studied whether additional energy sources are also necessary for protein translocation. Reticulocyte lysate (containing radiolabelled precursor proteins) and mitochondria were depleted of ATP by pre-incubation with apyrase. A membrane potential was then established by the addition of substrates of the electron transport chain. Oligomycin was included to prevent dissipation of delta psi by the action of the F0F1-ATPase. Under these conditions, import of subunit beta of
F1-ATPase
(F1 beta) was inhibited. Addition of ATP or
GTP
restored import. When the membrane potential was destroyed, however, the import of F1 beta was completely inhibited even in the presence of ATP. We therefore conclude that the import of F1 beta depends on both nucleoside triphosphates and a membrane potential.
...
PMID:Transport of F1-ATPase subunit beta into mitochondria depends on both a membrane potential and nucleoside triphosphates. 287 25
The ATPase activity of the F1 moiety of rat liver
ATP synthase
is inactivated when incubated prior to assay at 25 degrees C in the presence of MgCl2. The concentration of MgCl2 (130 microM) required to induce half-maximal inactivation is over 30 times higher than the apparent Km (MgCl2) during catalysis. Moreover, the relative efficacy of divalent cations in inducing inactivation during prior incubation follows an order significantly different from that promoting catalysis. Inactivation of
F1-ATPase
activity by Mg2+ is accompanied by the dramatic dissociation from the F1 complex of alpha subunits and part of the gamma-subunit population. The latter form a precipitate while the beta, delta, and epsilon subunits, and the remaining part of the gamma-subunit population, remain soluble. Dissociation is not a sudden "all or none" event but parallels loss of ATPase activity until alpha subunits have almost completely dissociated together with about 50% of the gamma-subunit population. Mg2+-induced loss of
F1-ATPase
activity cannot be prevented by including either the hydrolytic substrates ATP,
GTP
, or ITP in the incubation medium or the product ADP. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, mercaptoethanol, and dithiothreitol are also ineffective in preventing loss of ATPase activity. Significantly, KPi at high concentration (greater than or equal to 200 mM) is effective in partially protecting F1 against inactivation. However, the most effective means of preventing Mg2+-induced inactivation of
F1-ATPase
activity is to rebind F1 to its F0 moiety in F1-depleted particles. When bound to F0, F1 is protected completely against divalent cation induced inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mitochondrial ATP synthase: dramatic Mg2+-induced alterations in the structure and function of the F1-ATPase moiety. 289 44
The stoichiometry of nucleotide binding to the isolated alpha- and beta-subunits of Escherichia coli
F1-ATPase
was investigated using two experimental techniques: (a) titration with fluorescent trinitrophenyl (TNP) derivatives of AMP, ADP, and ATP and (b) the centrifuge column procedure using the particular conditions of Khananshvili and Gromet-Elhanan (Khananshvili, D., and Gromet-Elhanan, Z. (1985) FEBS Lett. 178, 10-14). Both procedures showed that alpha-subunit contains one nucleotide-binding site, confirming previous work. TNP-ADP and TNP-ATP bound to a maximal level of 1 mol/mol beta-subunit, consistent with previous equilibrium dialysis studies which showed isolated beta-subunit bound 1 mol of ADP or ATP per mol (Issartel, J. P., and Vignais, P. V. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6591-6595). However, binding of only approximately 0.1 mol of ATP or ADP per mol of beta-subunit was detected using centrifuge columns. Our results are consistent with the conclusion that each of the alpha- and beta-subunits contains one nucleotide-binding domain. Because the subunit stoichiometry is alpha 3 beta 3 gamma delta epsilon, this can account for the location of the six known nucleotide-binding sites in E. coli
F1-ATPase
. Studies of in vitro assembly of isolated alpha-, beta-, and gamma- subunits into an active ATPase showed that ATP,
GTP
, and ITP all supported assembly, with half-maximal reconstitution of ATPase occurring at concentrations of 100-200 microM, whereas ADP, GDP, and IDP did not. Also TNP-ATP supported assembly and TNP-ADP did not. The results demonstrate that (a) the nucleotide-binding site on beta-subunit has to be filled for enzyme assembly to proceed, whereas occupancy of the alpha-subunit nucleotide-binding site is not required, and (b) that enzyme assembly requires nucleoside triphosphate.
...
PMID:Trinitrophenyl-ATP and -ADP bind to a single nucleotide site on isolated beta-subunit of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase. In vitro assembly of F1-subunits requires occupancy of the nucleotide-binding site on beta-subunit by nucleoside triphosphate. 289 69
Whether the tightly bound ADP that can cause a pronounced inhibition of ATP hydrolysis by the chloroplast
ATP synthase
and F1 ATPase (CF1) is bound at catalytic sites or at noncatalytic regulatory sites or both has been uncertain. We have used photolabeling by 2-azido-ATP and 2-azido-ADP to ascertain the location, with Mg2+ activation, of tightly bound ADP (a) that inhibits the hydrolysis of ATP by chloroplast
ATP synthase
, (b) that can result in an inhibited form of CF1 that slowly regains activity during ATP hydrolysis, and (c) that arises when low concentrations of ADP markedly inhibit the hydrolysis of
GTP
by CF1. The data show that in all instances the inhibition is associated with ADP binding without inorganic phosphate (Pi) at catalytic sites. After photophosphorylation of ADP or 2-azido-ADP with [32P]Pi, similar amounts of the corresponding triphosphates are present on washed thylakoid membranes. Trials with appropriately labeled substrates show that a small portion of the tightly bound 2-azido-ATP gives rise to covalent labeling with an ATP moiety at noncatalytic sites but that most of the bound 2-azido-ATP gives rise to covalent labeling by an ADP moiety at a catalytic site. We also report the occurrence of a 1-2-min delay in the onset of the Mg2+-induced inhibition after addition of CF1 to solutions containing Mg2+ and ATP, and that this delay is not associated with the filling of noncatalytic sites. A rapid burst of Pi formation is followed by a much lower, constant steady-state rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Relationship of tightly bound ADP and ATP to control and catalysis by chloroplast ATP synthase. 290 55
The hydrolytic activity of
mitochondrial ATPase
, both in its soluble form as
F1-ATPase
, or as membrane bound in whole mitochondria, was affected by the presence of free nucleoside di- or triphosphates; these effects were largely depending not only on their concentration but also on the substrate concentration. The existence of a regulatory site or sites is proposed; these sites would have a higher affinity for the free nucleoside triphosphates than for the diphosphates, and the interaction of any of these nucleotides with the proposed regulatory site or sites would lead to an activation. The nucleotide regulatory site or sites seem to be different from the anion binding sites since neither free ATP nor free
GTP
compete with activating or inhibitory anions.
...
PMID:Nucleotide effects on kinetic properties of mitochondrial ATPase. 295 11
Novocaine segregation zones in frog's erythrocytes, isolated by differential centrifugation, were shown to be ATPase active. The enzyme displays half of its maximum activity at 0.18 Mm ATP concentration to be inhibited by high concentrations of ATP. ATPase is activated by both Mg2+ and Ca2+ (in a lesser degree), with the maximum activity being at pH 7.5. A 5 minutes heating without the substrate results in decreasing the enzyme activity at 30 degrees, and in the total inhibition at 50 degrees C. Along with ATP, the enzyme can hydrolyse
GTP
and, in a lesser degree, ADP and sodium pyrophosphate. The ATPase activity is not effected with oligomycin (0.5-1.5 mkg/ml) or ouabaine (0.1 mM). Oligomycin in concentration 5 micrograms/ml induced non-specific inhibition of ATPase. Uncouplers, like 2,4-dinitrophenol and carbonyl cyanid p-trifluorometoxyphenylhydrazone, stimulate the enzyme activity. The lack in the ATP-ase sensitivity to oligomycin (specific inhibitor of mitochondrial
F1-ATPase
) and ouabaine (specific inhibitor of Na+, K+-ATPase) may suggest that the ATPase activity of novocaine segregation zones in frog's erythrocytes is not associated with a random contamination with mitochondria or cytoplasmic membranes. The ATPase under study has much in common with the lysosomal +H-ATPase. The results obtained support a hypothesis that +H-ATPase may function as a course of protones for maintaining acidic medium in segregation zones and promote accumulation of weak bases by means of their protonation.
...
PMID:[ATPase activity of the novocaine segregation zones isolated from the erythrocytes of the common frog]. 298 28
The onset of respiration in the cyanobacteria Anacystis nidulans and Nostoc sp. strain Mac upon a shift from dark anaerobic to aerobic conditions was accompanied by rapid energization of the adenylate pool (owing to the combined action of
ATP synthase
and adenylate kinase) and also the guanylate, uridylate, and cytidylate pools (owing to nucleoside diphosphate and nucleoside monophosphate kinases). Rates of the various transphosphorylation reactions were comparable to the rate of oxidative phosphorylation, thus explaining, in part, low approximately P/O ratios which incorporate adenylates only. The increase of ATP,
GTP
, UTP, and CTP levels (nanomoles per minute per milligram [dry weight]) in oxygen-pulsed cells of A. nidulans and Nostoc species was calculated to be, on average, 2.3, 1.05, 0.8, and 0.57, respectively. Together with aerobic steady-state pool sizes of 1.35, 0.57, 0.5, and 0.4 nmol/mg (dry weight) for these nucleotides, a fairly uniform turnover of 1.3 to 1.5 min-1 was derived. All types of nucleotides, therefore, may be conceived of as being in equilibrium with each other, reflecting the energetic homeostasis or energy buffering of the (respiring) cyanobacterial cell. For the calculation of net efficiencies of oxidative phosphorylation in terms of approximately P/O ratios, this energy buffering was taken into account. Moreover, in A. nidulans an additional 30% of the energy initially conserved in ATP by oxidative phosphorylation was immediately used up by a plasma membrane-bound reversible H+-ATPase for H+ extrusion. Consequently, by allowing for energy buffering and ATPase-linked H+ extrusion, maximum P/O ratios of 2.6 to 3.3 were calculated. By contrast, in Nostoc sp. all the H+ extrusion, appeared to be linked to a plasma membrane-bound respiratory chain, thus bypassing any ATP formation and leading to P/O ratios of only 1.3 to 1.5 despite the correction for energy buffering.
...
PMID:Oxidative phosphorylation and energy buffering in cyanobacteria. 302 99
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