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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 known subunits of the membrane sector F0 of the bovine mitochondrial
ATP synthase
complex are subunits b, d, 6, F6, OSCP (oligomycin sensitivity-conferring protein), the DCCD (dicyclohexylcarbodiimide) binding proteolipid, and
A6L
. The first six subunits were purified from SMP or preparations of the
ATP synthase
complex, and monospecific antibodies were raised against each. The antisera were shown to be competent for immuno-blotting, and each antiserum recognized a single polypeptide of the expected Mr in preparations of the
ATP synthase
complex. Immunoblots utilizing antibodies to OSCP and subunits d and 6, which exhibit the same Mr on dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, showed clearly that these polypeptides are immunologically distinct. Immunological cross-reactivity was demonstrated between bovine, human, rat, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Paracoccus denitrificans, and Escherichia coli for subunit 6; between bovine, human, and rat for subunits b, d, OSCP, and F6; and between bovine and rat for the DCCD binding proteolipid. Anti-subunit 6 antiserum, before or after immunopurification against the
ATP synthase
complex, recognized a single polypeptide in the bovine
ATP synthase
complex and S. cerevisiae mitochondria, but two polypeptides of different Mr in bovine SMP, human, and rat mitochondria, and Paracoccus and E. coli membranes.
...
PMID:The F0 subunits of bovine mitochondrial ATP synthase complex: purification, antibody production, and interspecies cross-immunoreactivity. 182 14
An oligomycin-sensitive F1F0-ATPase isolated from bovine heart mitochondria has been reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles and pumps protons. this preparation of F1F0-ATPase contains 14 different polypeptides that are resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, and so it is more complex than bacterial and chloroplast enzymes, which have eight or nine different subunits. The 14 bovine subunits have been characterized by protein sequence analysis. They have been fractionated on polyacrylamide gels and transferred to poly(vinylidene difluoride) membranes, and N-terminal sequences have been determined in nine of them. By comparison with known sequences, eight of these have been identified as subunits beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon, which together with the alpha subunit form the F1 domain, as the b and c (or DCCD-reactive) subunits, both components of the membrane sector of the enzyme, and as the oligomycin sensitivity conferral protein (OSCP) and factor 6 (F6), both of which are required for attachment of F1 to the membrane sector. The sequence of the ninth, named subunit e, has been determined and is not related to any reported protein sequence. The N-terminal sequence of a tenth subunit, the membrane component
A6L
, could be determined after a mild acid treatment to remove an alpha-N-formyl group. Similar experiments with another membrane component, the a or ATPase-6 subunit, caused the protein to degrade, but the protein has been isolated from the enzyme complex and its position on gels has been unambiguously assigned. No N-terminal sequence could be derived from three other proteins. The largest of these is the alpha subunit, which previously has been shown to have pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid at the N terminus of the majority of its chains. The other two have been isolated from the enzyme complex; one of them is the membrane-associated protein, subunit d, which has an alpha-N-acetyl group, and the second, surprisingly, is the ATPase inhibitor protein. When it is isolated directly from mitochondrial membranes, the inhibitor protein has a frayed N terminus, with chains starting at residues 1, 2, and 3, but when it is isolated from the purified enzyme complex, its chains are not frayed and the N terminus is modified. Previously, the sequences at the N terminals of the alpha, beta, and delta subunits isolated from
F1-ATPase
had been shown to be frayed also, but in the F1F0 complex they each have unique N-terminal sequences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Identification of the subunits of F1F0-ATPase from bovine heart mitochondria. 182 92
A novel, simple, and rapid preparative method for purification of rat liver H(+)-
ATP synthase
by anion-exchange HPLC was developed. The H(+)-
ATP synthase
purified had higher ATPase activity in the absence of added phospholipids than any preparation reported previously, and this activity was completely inhibited by oligomycin. When reconstituted into proteoliposomes, the H(+)-
ATP synthase
showed an ATP-dependent 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate response and ATP-Pi exchange activity, both of which were also completely inhibited by oligomycin and an uncoupler, indicating the intactness of the H(+)-
ATP synthase
. An immunochemical study and a labeling experiment with N,N'-[14C]dicyclohexylcarbodiimide ([14C]DCCD) demonstrated the presence of chargerin II ( a product of mitochondrial
A6L
DNA) and DCCD-binding protein (subunit c) in the complex. The subunits of the complex were separated into 11 main fractions by reverse-phase HPLC, and 3 of them and the delta subunit in F1 were partially sequenced. A search for sequence homologies indicated that these components were subunit b, coupling factor 6, subunit delta, and subunit epsilon. This is the first report of the existence of subunit b, factor 6, and chargerin II in H(+)-
ATP synthase
purified from rat liver mitochondria.
...
PMID:H(+)-ATP synthase from rat liver mitochondria. A simple, rapid purification method of the functional complex and its characterization. 182 63
The topography of the subunits of the membrane sector F0 of the
ATP synthase
complex in the bovine mitochondrial inner membrane was studied with the help of subunit-specific antibodies raised to the F0 subunits b, d, 6, F6,
A6L
, OSCP (oligomycin-sensitivity-conferring protein), and N,N' -dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD)-binding proteolipid and to the ATPase inhibitor protein (IF1) as an internal control. Exposure of F0 subunits in inverted and right-side-out inner membranes was investigated by direct antibody binding as well as by susceptibility of these subunits to degradation by various proteases as monitored by gel electrophoresis of the membrane digests and immunoblotting with the subunit-specific antibodies. Results show that subunits b, d, F6,
A6L
(including its C-terminal end) and OSCP were exposed on the matrix side. Sufficient masses of these subunits to recognize antibodies or undergo proteolysis were not exposed on the cytosolic side. This was also the case for subunit 6 and the DCCD-binding proteolipid on either side of the inner membrane. Quantitative immunoblotting in which bound radio-activity from [125I]protein A was employed to estimate the concentration of an antigen in a sample allowed the determination of the stoichiometry of several F0 subunits and IF1 relative to
F1-ATPase
. Results showed that per mol of F1 there are in bovine heart mitochondria 1 mol each of d, OSCP, and IF1, and 2 mol each of b and F6. Subunit 6 and the DCCD-binding proteolipid could not be quantitated, because the former transferred poorly to nitrocellulose and the latter's antibody did not bind [125I]protein A.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial ATP synthase complex. Membrane topography and stoichiometry of the F0 subunits. 183 Mar 6
ATP synthase
is found in bacteria, chloroplasts and mitochondria. The simplest known example of such an enzyme is that in the eubacterium Escherichia coli; it is a membrane-bound assembly of eight different polypeptides assembled with a stoichiometry of alpha 3 beta 3 gamma 1 delta 1 epsilon 1 a1b2c10-12. The first five of these constitute a globular structure,
F1-ATPase
, which is bound to an intrinsic membrane domain, F0, an assembly of the three remaining subunits. ATP synthases driven by photosynthesis are slightly more complex. In chloroplasts, and probably in photosynthetic bacteria, they have nine subunits, all homologues of the components of the E. coli enzyme; the additional subunit is a duplicated and diverged relation of subunit b. The mammalian mitochondrial enzyme is more complex. It contains 14 different polypeptides, of which 13 have been characterized. Two membrane components, a (or ATPase-6) and
A6L
, are encoded in the mitochondrial genome in overlapping genes and the remaining subunits are nuclear gene products that are translated on cytoplasmic ribosomes and then imported into the organelle. The sequence of the proteins of ATP-synthase have provided information about amino acids that are important for its function. For example, amino acids contributing to nucleotide binding sites have been identified. Also, they provide the basis of models of secondary structure of membrane components that constitute the transmembrane proton channel. An understanding of the coupling of the transmembrane potential gradient for protons, delta mu H+, to ATP synthesis will probably require the determination of the structure of the entire membrane bound complex. Crystals have been obtained of the globular domain,
F1-ATPase
. They diffract to a resolution of 3-4 A and data collection is in progress. As a preliminary step towards crystallization of the entire complex, we have purified it from bovine mitochondria and reconstituted it into phospholipid vesicles.
...
PMID:Structural aspects of proton-pumping ATPases. 197 Jun 43
Previous studies suggested that the hydrophobic protein chargerin II, which is encoded in the
A6L
of mitochondrial DNA, may have a key role in the energy transduction by mitochondrial H(+)-
ATP synthase
because an antibody against chargerin II inhibited ATP synthesis and ATP-Pi exchange, in an energy-dependent fashion. In the present work, the contents of chargerin II in the H(+)-
ATP synthase
purified from rat liver mitochondria and in submitochondrial particles were determined by radioimmunoassay. Results showed that the H(+)-
ATP synthase
contained chargerin II in a molar ratio of one to one. This is the first report on the stoichiometry of the
A6L
-product in mitochondrial H(+)-
ATP synthase
.
...
PMID:Stoichiometry of chargerin II (A6L) in the H(+)-ATP synthase of rat liver mitochondria. 213 30
Previous studies suggested that the hydrophobic protein chargerin II, which is encoded in the unidentified reading frame
A6L
of mitochondrial DNA (URFA6L), may have a key role in the energy transduction by mitochondrial
ATP synthase
because an antibody against chargerin II inhibited ATP synthesis and ATP-Pi exchange, in an energy-dependent fashion. In the present work, the orientation of chargerin II in Fo of the
ATP synthase
of rat liver mitochondria was examined using antibodies against peptides of chargerin II. Results showed that its N-terminal region (about 8 amino acid residues) was exposed on the surface of the C-side of Fo, but its C-terminal and charge-cluster regions were buried in Fo.
...
PMID:Orientation of chargerin II (A6L) in the ATP synthase of rat liver mitochondria determined with antibodies against peptides of the protein. 253 82
Two hydrophobic proteins have been purified to homogeneity from a mixture of about 13 proteins that are extracted from bovine mitochondria with a chloroform:methanol mixture. Sequence analysis shows that the smaller is a protein of 66 amino acids and is the product of a mitochondrial gene,
A6L
. The larger, a protein of 226 amino acids, is ATPase-6, a membrane component of
ATP synthase
, also encoded in mitochondrial DNA. The protein sequences determined establish that the genes for the two proteins overlap by 40 bases and indicate that translation of the second gene, ATPase-6, is initiated within the coding region of
A6L
. The
A6L
and the ATPase-6 proteins have also been isolated from the
ATP synthase
complex and so appear to be bona fide components of the enzyme. The function of
A6L
is unknown. However, weak structural homology suggests a functional similarity to the yeast mitochondrial protein, aapI, which is required for assembly of the fungal
ATP synthase
complex. Homologies between ATPase-6 and subunit a of the Escherichia coli
ATP synthase
complex indicate that the ATPase-6 protein has a similar role in the mitochondrial complex to its bacterial counterpart, being essential for the formation of an active proton channel.
...
PMID:Two overlapping genes in bovine mitochondrial DNA encode membrane components of ATP synthase. 287 70
Bovine cardiac muscle was extracted by an acidic chloroform/methanol mixture. A combination of gel permeation and ion-exchange chromatographies in organic solvents and HPLC allowed the purification of subunits VIIIa (Mr 5400) and VIIIb (Mr 4900) of cytochrome c oxidase and of
A6L
protein (Mr 7900) of
ATP synthase
. The identification of the proteins was made possible by measurement of their molecular weight by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry (FAB-MS) in conjunction with conventional Edman degradation. The determination by FAB-MS of the molecular weight of
A6L
protein confirmed its supposed formylated N-terminal methionine.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of low-molecular-weight beef heart proteolipids: use of fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry for identification. 290 96
We have determined the nucleotide sequence of the URF
A6L
and ATPase 6 genes of the mitochondrial DNA of wild-type Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and of two independently isolated, cytoplasmically inherited CHO mutant cell lines that are resistant to oligomycin, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
(
ATPase
) complex. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the mutants with that of their parental cell line revealed a single nucleotide difference, a G-to-A transition at nucleotide 433 of the ATPase 6 gene. This single base pair change predicts a nonconservative amino acid change, with a glutamic acid residue being replaced by a lysine residue at amino acid 145 of the ATPase 6 gene product in the mutants. This glutamic acid residue and several others in the surrounding amino acid sequence are conserved among all species examined to date. Analyses of several of the biochemical properties of the oligomycin-resistant CHO mutants indicate that the glutamic acid residue at position 145 of subunit 6 of the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
complex is important for the binding of oligomycin to the enzyme complex, but is not essential for proton translocation.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial DNA of two independent oligomycin-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cell lines contains a single nucleotide change in the ATPase 6 gene. 301 40
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