Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.3.14 (ATP synthase)
7,042 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The structure of ATP synthase subunit 4 was determined by using the oligonucleotide probe procedure. This subunit is the fourth polypeptide of the complex when classifying subunits in order of decreasing molecular mass. Its relative molecular mass is 25 kDa. The ATP4 gene was isolated and sequenced. The nucleotide sequence predicts that subunit 4 is probably derived from a precursor protein 244 amino acids long. Mature subunit 4 contains 209 amino acid residues and the predicted molecular mass is 23250 kDa. Subunit 4 shows homology with the b-subunit of Escherichia coli ATP synthase and the b-subunit of beef heart mitochondrial ATP synthase. By using homologous transformation, a mutant lacking wild subunit 4 was constructed. This mutant is devoid of oxidative phosphorylation and F1 is loosely bound to the membrane. Our data are in favor of a structural relationship between subunit 4 and the mitochondrially-translated subunit 6 during biogenesis of F0.
...
PMID:The yeast ATP synthase subunit 4: structure and function. 255 30

A yeast genomic library in the bacteriophage expression vector lambda gt11 was screened with a polyclonal anti-holo-ATPase antiserum resulting in the isolation of 54 immunoreactive clones. Four of these phage clones express in bacteria a polypeptide antigenically related to an 18 kDa subunit (P18) of the yeast mitochondrial ATPase complex. Molecular analysis of the yeast DNA inserts in these phage clones revealed two classes of yeast DNA that share little homology at the nucleotide sequence level and therefore may represent distinct separate genes. The polypeptides potentially encoded by these yeast DNA segments do show scattered short blocks of strong amino acid sequence homology, which may underlie the observed immunochemical relatedness between the proteins expressed in bacteria.
...
PMID:Yeast genomic clones encoding polypeptides immunologically related to an 18 kDa subunit of mitochondrial ATP synthase. 256 45

A full length cDNA clone encoding the precursor of the rat liver mitochondrial phosphate transporter (H+/Pi symporter) has been isolated from a cDNA library using a bovine heart partial length phosphate transporter clone as a hybridization probe. The entire clone is 1263 base pairs in length with 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions of 16 and 168 base pairs, respectively. The open reading frame encodes for the mature protein (312 amino acids) preceded by a presequence of 44 amino acids enriched in basic residues. The polypeptide sequence predicted from the DNA sequence was confirmed by analyzing the first 17 amino-terminal amino acids of the pure phosphate transporter protein. The rat liver phosphate transporter differs from the bovine heart transporter in 32 amino acids (i.e. approximately 10%). It contains a region from amino acid 139 to 159 which is 37% identical with the beta-subunit of the liver mitochondrial ATP synthase. Amino acid sequence comparisons of the Pi transporter with Pi binding proteins, other H+-linked symporters, and the human glucose transporter did not reveal significant sequence homology. Analysis of genomic DNA from both rat and S. cerevisiae by Southern blots using the rat liver mitochondrial Pi carrier cDNA as a probe revealed remarkably similar restriction patterns, a finding consistent with the presence in lower and higher eukaryotes of homologous Pi carrier proteins. This is the first report of the isolation, sequencing, and characterization of a full length cDNA coding for a protein involved in energy-coupled Pi transport.
...
PMID:Energy-linked anion transport. Cloning, sequencing, and characterization of a full length cDNA encoding the rat liver mitochondrial proton/phosphate symporter. 267 Sep 44

Respiratory deficient mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae previously assigned to complementation group G59 are pleiotropically deficient in respiratory chain components and in mitochondrial ATPase. This phenotype has been shown to be a consequence of mutations in a nuclear gene coding for mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase. The structural gene (MSL1) coding for the mitochondrial enzyme has been cloned by transformation of two different G59 mutants with genomic libraries of wild type yeast nuclear DNA. The cloned gene has been sequenced and shown to code for a protein of 894 residues with a molecular weight of 101,936. The amino-terminal sequence (30-40 residues) has a large percentage of basic and hydroxylated residues suggestive of a mitochondrial import signal. The cloned MSL1 gene was used to construct a strain in which 1 kb of the coding sequence was deleted and substituted with the yeast LEU2 gene. Mitochondrial extracts obtained from the mutant carrying the disrupted MSL1::LEU2 allele did not catalyze acylation of mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA even though other tRNAs were normally charged. These results confirmed the correct identification of MSL1 as the structural gene for mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase. Mutations in MSL1 affect the ability of yeast to grow on nonfermentable substrates but are not lethal indicating that the cytoplasmic leucyl-tRNA synthetase is encoded by a different gene. The primary sequence of yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase has been compared to other bacterial and eukaryotic synthetases. Significant homology has been found between the yeast enzyme and the methionyl- and isoleucyl-tRNA synthetases of Escherichia coli. The most striking primary sequence homology occurs in the amino-terminal regions of the three proteins encompassing some 150 residues. Several smaller domains in the more internal regions of the polypeptide chains, however, also exhibit homology. These observations have been interpreted to indicate that the three synthetases may represent a related subset of enzymes originating from a common ancestral gene.
...
PMID:Homology of yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase and isoleucyl- and methionyl-tRNA synthetases of Escherichia coli. 282 65

H+-translocating, Mg2+-ATPase was solubilized from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the zwitterionic detergent N-tetradecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate and purified by glycerol density gradient centrifugation. Partially purified vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase, which had a specific activity of 18 units/mg of protein, was separated almost completely from acid phosphatase and alkaline phosphatase. The purified enzyme required phospholipids for maximal activity and hydrolyzed ATP, GTP, UTP, and CTP, with this order of preference. Its Km value for Mg2+-ATP was determined to be 0.21 mM and its optimal pH was 6.9. ADP inhibited the enzyme activity competitively, with a Ki value of 0.31 mM. The activity of purified ATPase was strongly inhibited by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide, tributyltin, 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzoxazole, diethylstilbestrol, and quercetin, but was not affected by oligomycin, sodium azide, sodium vanadate, or miconazole. It was not inhibited at all by antiserum against mitochondrial F1-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase inhibitor protein. These results indicated that vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase is different from either yeast plasma membrane H+-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase. The vacuolar membrane H+-ATPase was found to be composed of two major polypeptides a and b of Mr = 89,000 and 64,000, respectively, and a N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide binding polypeptide c of Mr = 19,500, whose polypeptide composition was also different from those of either plasma membrane H+-ATPase or mitochondrial F1-ATPase of S. cerevisiae.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of H+-translocating, Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 285 69

Mitochondrial H+ -ATPase complex, purified by the lysolecithin extraction procedure, has been resolved into a "membrane" (NaBr-F0) and a "soluble" fraction by treatment with 3.5 M sodium bromide. The NaBr-F0 fraction is completely devoid of beta, delta, and epsilon subunits of the F, ATPase and largely devoid of alpha and gamma subunits of F1, where F0 is used to denote the membrane fraction and F1, coupling factor 1. This is confirmed by complete loss of ATPase and Pi-ATP exchange activities. The addition of F1 (400 micrograms X mg-1 F0) results in complete restoration of oligomycin sensitivity without any reduction in the F1-ATPase activity. Presumably, this is due to release of ATPase inhibitor protein from the F1-F0 complex consequent to sodium bromide extraction. Restoration of Pi-ATP exchange and H+ -pumping activities require coupling factor B in addition to F1-ATPase. The oligomycin-sensitive ATPase and 32Pi-ATP exchange activities in reconstituted F1-F0 have the same sensitivity to uncouplers and energy transfer inhibitors as in starting submitochondrial particles from the heavy layer of mitochondria and F1-F0 complex. The data suggest that the altered properties of NaBr-F0 observed in other laboratories are probably inherent to their F1-F0 preparations rather than to sodium bromide treatment itself. The H+ -ATPase (F1-F0) complex of all known prokaryotic (3, 8, 9, 10, 21, 32, 34) and eukaryotic (11, 26, 30, 33, 35-37) phosphorylating membranes contain two functionally and structurally distinct entities. The hydrophilic component F1, composed of five unlike subunits, shows ATPase activity that is cold labile as well as uncoupler- and oligomycin-insensitive. The membrane-bound hydrophobic component F0, having no energy-linked catalytic activity of its own, is indirectly assayed by its ability to regain oligomycin sensitive ATPase and Pi-ATP exchange activities on binding to F1-ATPase (33). The purest preparations of bovine heart mitochondrial F0 show seven or eight major components in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate or SDS-PAGE (1, 2, 12, 14), ranging from 6 to 54 ku in molecular weight (12). The precise structure and polypeptide composition of mitochondrial F0 is not known. The F0 preparations from bovine heart reported so far have been derived from H+ -ATPase preparations isolated in the presence of cholate and deoxycholate (11, 33, 36, 37).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Resolution and reconstitution of H+ -ATPase complex from beef heart mitochondria. 285 48

The beta subunit of the mitochondrial ATP synthase in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia is encoded by two nuclear genes, atp2-1 and atp2-2, which are both expressed. The complete nucleotide sequence of atp2-1 has been determined. It contains eight introns ranging from 88 to 1453 bp. The last intron contains a putative insertion element (Inp), of 812 bp bordered by 35-bp inverted repeats which share an 11-bp homology with Agrobacterium tumefaciens T-DNA borders. Sequences homologous to Inp are present in multiple copies in the N. plumbaginifolia and the N. tabacum genome but not in more distant species. The atp2-1 encoded polypeptide is highly homologous to beta subunits from other ATP synthases but it contains an extension at the N terminus which is probably involved in mitochondrial targeting. A sequence homology between exon 4 of atp2-1 and exon 1 of the human ras genes suggests a common ancestral origin for these exons.
...
PMID:A nuclear gene encoding the beta subunit of the mitochondrial ATP synthase in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia. 286 54

A series of isonuclear oligomycin-resistant mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae carrying mutations in the mitochondrial oli1 gene has been studied. DNA sequence analysis of this gene has been used to define the amino acid substitutions in subunit 9 of the mitochondrial ATPase complex. A domain of amino acids involved in oligomycin resistance can be recognized which encompasses residues in each of the two hydrophobic portions of the subunit 9 polypeptide that are thought to span the inner mitochondrial membrane. Certain amino acid substitutions also confer cross-resistance to venturicidin: these residues define an inner domain for venturicidin resistance. The expression of venturicidin resistance resulting from one particular substitution is modulated by nuclear genetic factors.
...
PMID:Amino acid substitutions in mitochondrial ATPase subunit 9 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae leading to oligomycin or venturicidin resistance. 286 35

Three F0 subunits and the F1 subunit beta of the ATP synthase from Neurospora crassa were labeled with the lipophilic photoactivatable reagent 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine ([125I]TID). In the proteolipid subunit which was the most heavily labeled polypeptide labeling was confined to five residues at the NH2-terminus and five residues at the C-terminus of the protein. Labeling occurred at similar positions compared with the homologous protein (subunit c) in the ATP synthase from Escherichia coli, indicating a similar structure of the proteolipid subunits in their respective organisms. The inhibitors oligomycin and dicyclohexylcarbodiimide did not change the pattern of accessible surface residues in the proteolipid, suggesting that neither inhibitor induces gross conformational changes. However, in the presence of oligomycin, the extent of labeling in some residues was reduced. Apparently, these residues provide part of the binding site for the inhibitor. After reaction with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide an additional labeled amino acid was found at position 65 corresponding to the invariant carbodiimide-binding glutamic acid. These results and previous observations indicate that the carboxyl side chain of Glu-65 is located at the protein-lipid interphase. The idea is discussed that proton translocation occurs at the interphase between different types if F0 subunits. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide or oligomycin might disturb this essential interaction between the F0 subunits.
...
PMID:Labeling of individual amino acid residues in the membrane-embedded F0 part of the F1 F0 ATP synthase from Neurospora crassa. Influence of oligomycin and dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. 286 44

Cloned DNA from Bacillus megaterium can complement mutants in the Escherichia coli proton-translocating ATPase. DNA from the E. coli unc operon, which codes for the ATPase, was used in hybridization experiments to probe for homologous DNA in the Gram-positive sporulating bacterium Bacillus megaterium. Such DNA was identified and subsequently cloned into pBR322. In an E. coli in vitro transcription-translation system, the resultant plasmid directed the synthesis of a 52,000 Mr polypeptide which could be precipitated with antiserum to the E. coli F1-ATPase. This plasmid was also capable of complementing E. coli uncA and uncD mutants, defective in the alpha and beta subunits of the ATPase, respectively. Therefore, the cloned B. megaterium DNA carries the genes for the alpha and beta subunits, and perhaps for other subunits, of the proton-translocating ATPase of B. megaterium. These bacillus subunits can be synthesized and assembled in vivo into a functional hybrid E. coli-B. megaterium ATPase.
...
PMID:Complementation of mutants in the Escherichia coli proton-translocating ATPase by cloned DNA from Bacillus megaterium. 287 65


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>