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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 beta-subunit of the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
complex comprises the bulk, if not all, of the catalytic nucleotide binding site on the enzyme. A region of homologous sequence rich in glycines (G) and containing a basic lysine (K) and a
threonine
(T) is found in the beta-subunit as well as many other purine nucleotide binding proteins. The consensus sequence of this region is Gx4GKT, where x represents any amino acid, and is called the A region or glycine-rich loop. The related function of these proteins implies that the glycine-rich loop is directly involved in nucleotide binding. Here we directly test the involvement of the beta-subunit's glycine-rich region in adenine nucleotide binding using two independent approaches. A synthetic fifty amino acid peptide, PP-50, containing the glycine-rich region and the surrounding sequence was assessed for secondary structure and interaction with potential ligands. Circular dichroism spectropolarimetry indicates that PP-50 assumes a predominantly beta-sheet conformation in solution. Significantly, the peptide precipitates from solution when ATP, ADP, GTP, ITP, and pyrophosphate are added, but not when AMP or phosphate are included. Magnesium is not required for the interaction with the purine nucleotides. Complimentary to these studies, the sequence around the Gx4GKT motif was deleted from a recombinant rat liver beta-subunit overexpressed in E. coli. While the wild type beta-subunit showed specificity for the tri- and diphosphonucleotides, the deletion mutant bound tri-, di-, and monophosphate nucleotides with equal affinity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mitochondrial F-type ATPases: the glycine-rich loop of the beta-subunit is a pyrophosphate binding domain. 133 55
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) inhibits the activity of the F1F0-H+
ATP synthase
of Escherichia coli by reacting with aspartyl 61 in subunit c of the FO sector to form a stable N-acylurea. The segment of chromosomal DNA which codes the subunits of the FO was cloned from four independently isolated DCCD-resistant mutants, and the sequence of the subunit c gene (uncE) was determined. An Ala24 to serine (A24S) substitution was found in the subunit c gene of each mutant. The A24S uncE gene was cloned into the BamHI site of a mutant derivative of plasmid pBR322. The A24S subunit c conferred DCCD resistance to a variety of recipient E. coli strains when it was overexpressed from this plasmid. A 7-base pair deletion beginning at position 132 of the plasmid vector was responsible for the observed overexpression. Hoppe et al. (Hoppe, J., Schairer, H. U., and Sebald, W. (1980) Eur. J. Biochem. 112, 17-24) had previously shown that mutation of subunit c Ile28 to
threonine
or valine resulted in DCCD resistance. The DCCD sensitivities of the membrane ATPase of these mutants and the A24S mutant were compared. DCCD sensitivity decreased in the order: wild-type much greater than I27V greater than I28T = A24S. The venturicidin sensitivities of wild-type and mutant membranes were also examined. The membrane ATPase of the I28T and I28V mutants was venturicidin resistant whereas the A24S substitution resulted in a hypersensitivity to inhibition by venturicidin. These results support a model in which subunit c folds in the membrane like a hairpin, where the region of residues 24-28 in transmembrane helix-1 is close to that of aspartyl 61 in transmembrane helix-2.
...
PMID:Mutation of alanine 24 to serine in subunit c of the Escherichia coli F1F0-ATP synthase reduces reactivity of aspartyl 61 with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. 183 53
An endogenous ATPase inhibitor protein has been identified and isolated for the first time from plant mitochondria. The inhibitor protein was isolated from potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber mitochondria and purified to homogeneity. The isolated inhibitor is a heat-stable, trypsin-sensitive, basic protein, with a molecular mass approximately 8.3 kDa. Amino acid analysis reveals a high content of glutamic acid, lysine and arginine and the absence of proline;
threonine
and leucine. The interaction of the inhibitor with
F1-ATPase
requires the presence of Mg2(+)-ATP in the incubation medium. The ATPase activity of isolated F1 is inhibited to 50% in the presence of 14 micrograms inhibitor/mg F1. A stoichiometry of 1.3 mol inhibitor/mol F1 for complete inhibition can be calculated from this value. The potato ATPase inhibitor is also a potent inhibitor of the ATPase activity of the isolated yeast F1. The inhibitor resembles the ATPase inhibitors of yeast and mammalian mitochondria, and does not seem to be related to the inhibitory peptide, epsilon subunit, of
chloroplast ATPase
.
...
PMID:Evidence for an endogenous ATPase inhibitor protein in plant mitochondria. Purification and characterization. 213 39
A mutant strain of Escherichia coli carrying a mutation in the uncE gene which codes for the c-subunit of the F1F0-ATPase has been isolated and examined. The mutant allele, designated uncE513, results in alanine at position 25 of the c-subunit being replaced by
threonine
. The mutant F1F0-ATPase appears to be fully assembled and is partially functional with respect to oxidative phosphorylation. The ATPase activity of membranes from the mutant strain is resistant to the inhibitor dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, but this is due to the
F1-ATPase
being lost from the membranes in the presence of the inhibitor. Mutant membranes from which the
F1-ATPase
has been removed have a greatly reduced proton permeability compared with similarly treated normal membranes. The results are discussed in relation to a previously proposed mechanism of oxidative phosphorylation.
...
PMID:The F1F0-ATPase of Escherichia coli. The substitution of alanine by threonine at position 25 in the c-subunit affects function but not assembly. 286 49
A model for the mechanism of
ATP synthase
was proposed previously (Cox, G.B., Jans, D.A., Fimmel, A.L., Gibson, F. and Hatch, L. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 768, 201-208) in which the b subunit of the Fo of Escherichia coli rotated. The driving force was proposed to be an interaction between two charged residues in the membrane, namely, Lys-23 of the b subunit and Asp-61 of the c subunit. To test this proposal the Lys-23 of the b subunit was replaced by
threonine
using site-directed mutagenesis. The resulting mutant, although it had an impairment in the assembly of the F1F0-ATPase, was normal with respect to oxidative phosphorylation. The role of the a subunit, which had been previously proposed to be a structural one, was reassessed by examination of the possible secondary and tertiary structure of the analogous proteins from several sources. Not only did these subunits appear to have very similar structures, but in each there was a highly conserved helical arm on one of the transmembrane helices which could form a proton channel if it interacted with the Asp-61 of the c subunit. A revised model is therefore presented in which five transmembrane helices from the a subunit and two from the b subunit are surrounded by a ring of c subunits. The highly conserved nature of the structures of the a, b and c subunits from various organisms suggests that the model may have relevance for ATP synthases from bacterial plasma membranes, mitochondria and chloroplasts.
...
PMID:The mechanism of ATP synthase: a reassessment of the functions of the b and a subunits. 286 82
A 50-amino acid peptide predicted by chemical modification studies of F1 and by comparison with adenylate kinase to comprise part of an ATP-binding domain within the beta-subunit of mitochondrial
ATP synthase
has been synthesized and purified. In the numbering system used for bovine heart beta, the peptide consists of amino acid residues from aspartate 141 at the N-terminal end to
threonine
190 at the carboxyl end. In Tris-Cl buffer, pH 7.4, the peptide undergoes a dramatic reaction with ATP resulting in precipitate formation. Analysis of the precipitate shows it to contain both peptide and ATP. Similar to the ATPase activity of F1 and the binding of nucleotide to the enzyme, the capacity of ATP to induce precipitation of the peptide is decreased markedly by lowering pH. Interaction of the peptide with the fluorescent ATP analog, TNP-ATP (2'(3')-O-(2,4-6-trinitrophenyl)-adenosine 5'-triphosphate), can be demonstrated in solution at low concentrations. A 7-fold enhancement in fluorescence is observed when 2.5 microM TNP-ATP interacts with 2.5 microM peptide. Divalent cation is neither required for ATP-induced precipitation of the peptide nor for demonstrating interaction between TNP-ATP and peptide, just as Mg2+ is not required for nucleotide binding to F1. These results indicate that the beta-subunit peptide studied here comprises at least part of a nucleotide-binding domain within the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
complex.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial ATP synthase. Interaction of a synthetic 50-amino acid, beta-subunit peptide with ATP. 289 4
cDNA clones encoding a precursor of the alpha-subunit of the mitochondrial
ATP synthase
complex have been isolated from a bovine liver cDNA library using the alpha-subunit gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a probe. Analyses of the nucleotide sequence of these cDNA clones reveal that the bovine liver
ATP synthase
alpha-subunit is initially synthesized as a precursor with an aminoterminal extension 43 amino acids in length. This aminoterminal presequence contains seven basic residues, no acidic residues, and seven polar uncharged serine and
threonine
residues. A single mRNA species, approximately 1.85 kb in length, was detected for the
ATP synthase
alpha-subunit precursor in both bovine liver and heart.
...
PMID:Bovine liver cDNA clones encoding a precursor of the alpha-subunit of the mitochondrial ATP synthase complex. 289
Two ATPase inhibitor proteins were isolated together from bovine heart mitochondria by a new procedure; each was purified further. The one inhibitor is a Ca2+-binding protein. It was found to contain 2 cysteine residues/mol as well as
threonine
and proline residues, all of which the other inhibitor (first isolated by Pullman and Monroy (Pullman, M.E., and Monroy, G. C. (1963) J. Biol. Chem. 238, 3762-3769] lacks. Its minimal molecular weight was 6390 with 62 amino acid residues/mol, and its isoelectric point was 4.6. Besides differences in size, composition, and response to Ca2+, the two inhibitor proteins also differed in response to sulfhydryl compounds, pH, KCl, and cardiolipin. Inhibition by the two inhibitor proteins was additive. Both cross-reacted with
mitochondrial ATPase
from rat skeletal muscle. Calmodulin, with or without Ca2+, had no effect on the activity of either inhibitor protein. Antibody to the Ca2+-binding inhibitor protein did not interact with the Pullman-Monroy inhibitor or have any effect on its activity. The antibody interacted with intact submitochondrial particles that contained both inhibitor proteins but not with particles from which only the Ca2+-binding inhibitor had been removed. Clearly, the two inhibitors are distinct immunologically as well as in other properties. The two types of inhibitor protein were also isolated from rat skeletal muscle mitochondria by the new procedure.
...
PMID:The calcium-binding ATPase inhibitor protein from bovine heart mitochondria. Purification and properties. 340 40
The amino acid sequence of the proteolipid subunit of the
ATP synthase
was analyzed in six mutant strains from Escherichia coli K12, selected for their increased resistance towards the inhibitor N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. All six inhibitor-resistant mutants were found to be altered at the same position of the proteolipid, namely at the isoleucine at residue 28. Two substitutions could be identified. In type I this residue was substituted by a valine resulting in a moderate decrease in sensitivity to dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Type II contained a
threonine
residue at this position. Here a strong resistance was observed. These two amino acid substitutions did not influence functional properties of the ATPase complex. ATPase as well as ATP-dependent proton-translocating activities of mutant membranes were indistinguishable from the wild type. At elevated concentrations, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide still bound specifically to the aspartic acid at residue 61 of the mutant proteolipid as in the wild type, and thereby inhibited the activity of the ATPase complex. It is suggested that the residue 28 substituted in the resistant mutants interacts with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide during the reactions leading to the covalent attachment of the inhibitor to the aspartic acid at residue 61. This could indicate that these two residues are in close vicinity and would thus provide a first hint on the functional conformation of the proteolipid. Its polypeptide chain would have to fold back to bring together these two residues separated by a segment of 32 residues.
...
PMID:Identification of amino-acid substitutions in the proteolipid subunit of the ATP synthase from dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli. 625 67
The gene encoding the epsilon subunit (atpE) of the chloroplast
ATP synthase
of Spinacia oleracea has been overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein can be solubilized in 8 M urea and directly diluted into buffer containing ethanol and glycerol to obtain epsilon that is as biologically active as epsilon purified from chloroplast-coupling factor 1 (CF1). Recombinant epsilon folded in this manner inhibits the ATPase activity of soluble and membrane-bound CF1 deficient in epsilon and restores proton impermeability to thylakoid membranes reconstituted with CF1 deficient in epsilon. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate truncations and single amino acid substitutions in the primary structure of epsilon. In the five mutants tested, alterations that weaken ATPase inhibition by recombinant epsilon affect its ability to restore proton impermeability to a similar extent, with one exception. Substitution of histidine-37 with arginine appears to uncouple ATPase inhibition and the restoration of proton impermeability. As in the case of E. coli, it appears that N-terminal truncations of the epsilon subunit have more profound effects than C-terminal deletions on the function of epsilon. Recombinant epsilon with six amino acids deleted from the C terminus, which is the only region of significant mismatch between the epsilon of spinach and the epsilon of Pisum sativum, inhibits ATPase activity with a reduced potency similar to that of purified pea epsilon. Four of the six amino acids are serine or
threonine
. These hydroxylated amino acids may be important in epsilon-CF1 interactions.
...
PMID:Molecular dissection of the epsilon subunit of the chloroplast ATP synthase of spinach. 853 97
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