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1.
The structure of bovine F(1)-ATPase, crystallized in the presence of AMP-PNP and ADP, but in the absence of azide, has been determined at 1.9A resolution. This structure has been compared with the previously described structure of bovine F(1)-ATPase determined at 1.95A resolution with crystals grown under the same conditions but in the presence of azide. The two structures are extremely similar, but they differ in the nucleotides that are bound to the catalytic site in the beta(DP)-subunit. In the present structure, the nucleotide binding sites in the beta(DP)- and beta(TP)-subunits are both occupied by AMP-PNP, whereas in the earlier structure, the beta(TP) site was occupied by AMP-PNP and the beta(DP) site by ADP, where its binding is enhanced by a bound azide ion. Also, the conformation of the side chain of the catalytically important residue, alphaArg-373 differs in the beta(DP)- and beta(TP)-subunits. Thus, the structure with bound azide represents the ADP inhibited state of the enzyme, and the new structure represents a ground state intermediate in the active catalytic cycle of ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: The globular domain of the membrane-associated F(1)F(o)-ATP synthase complex can be detached intact as a water-soluble fragment known as F(1)-ATPase. It consists of five different subunits, alpha, beta, gamma, delta and epsilon, assembled with the stoichiometry 3:3:1:1:1. In the crystal structure of bovine F(1)-ATPase determined previously at 2.8 A resolution, the three catalytic beta subunits and the three noncatalytic alpha subunits are arranged alternately around a central alpha-helical coiled coil in the gamma subunit. In the crystals, the catalytic sites have different nucleotide occupancies. One contains the triphosphate form of the nucleotide, the second contains the diphosphate, and the third is unoccupied. Fluoroaluminate complexes have been shown to mimic the transition state in several ATP and GTP hydrolases. In order to understand more about its catalytic mechanism, F(1)-ATPase was inhibited with Mg(2+)ADP and aluminium fluoride and the structure of the inhibited complex was determined by X-ray crystallography. RESULTS: The structure of bovine F(1)-ATPase inhibited with Mg(2+)ADP and aluminium fluoride determined at 2.5 A resolution differs little from the original structure with bound AMP-PNP and ADP. The nucleotide occupancies of the alpha and beta subunits are unchanged except that both aluminium trifluoride and Mg(2+)ADP are bound in the nucleotide-binding site of the beta(DP) subunit. The presence of aluminium fluoride is accompanied by only minor adjustments in the surrounding protein. CONCLUSIONS: The structure appears to mimic a possible transition state. The coordination of the aluminofluoride group has many features in common with other aluminofluoride-NTP hydrolase complexes. Apparently, once nucleotide is bound to the catalytic beta subunit, no additional major structural changes are required for catalysis to occur.  相似文献   

3.
In the crystal structure of mitochondrial F1-ATPase, two beta subunits with a bound Mg-nucleotide are in "closed" conformations, whereas the third beta subunit without bound nucleotide is in an "open" conformation. In this "CCO" (beta-closed beta-closed beta-open) conformational state, Ile-390s of the two closed beta subunits, even though they are separated by an intervening alpha subunit, have a direct contact. We replaced the equivalent Ile of the alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex of thermophilic F1-ATPase with Cys and observed the formation of the beta-beta cross-link through a disulfide bond. The analysis of conditions required for the cross-link formation indicates that: (i) F1-ATPase takes the CCO conformation when two catalytic sites are filled with Mg-nucleotide, (ii) intermediate(s) with the CCO conformation are generated during catalytic cycle, (iii) the Mg-ADP inhibited form is in the CCO conformation, and (iv) F1-ATPase dwells in conformational state(s) other than CCO when only one (or none) of catalytic sites is filled by Mg-nucleotide or when catalytic sites are filled by Mg2+-free nucleotide. The alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex containing the beta-beta cross-link retained the activity of uni-site catalysis but lost that of multiple catalytic turnover, suggesting that open-closed transition of beta subunits is required for the rotation of gamma subunit but not for hydrolysis of a single ATP.  相似文献   

4.
ATP synthase uses a unique rotary mechanism to couple ATP synthesis and hydrolysis to transmembrane proton translocation. The F(1) subcomplex has three catalytic nucleotide binding sites, one on each beta subunit, at the interface to the adjacent alpha subunit. In the x-ray structure of F(1) (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628), the three catalytic beta/alpha interfaces differ in the extent of inter-subunit interactions between the C termini of the beta and alpha subunits. At the closed beta(DP)/alpha(DP) interface, a hydrogen-bonding network is formed between both subunits, which is absent at the more open beta(TP)/alpha(TP) interface and at the wide open beta(E)/alpha(E) interface. The hydrogen-bonding network reaches from betaL328 (Escherichia coli numbering) and betaQ441 via alphaQ399, betaR398, and alphaE402 to betaR394, and ends in a cation/pi interaction between betaR394 and alphaF406. Using mutational analysis in E. coli ATP synthase, the functional importance of the beta(DP)/alpha(DP) hydrogen-bonding network is demonstrated. Its elimination results in a severely impaired enzyme but has no pronounced effect on the binding affinities of the catalytic sites. A possible role for the hydrogen-bonding network in coupling of ATP synthesis/hydrolysis and rotation will be discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Probing conformations of the beta subunit of F0F1-ATP synthase in catalysis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A subcomplex of F0F1-ATP synthase (F0F1), alpha3beta3gamma, was shown to undergo the conformation(s) during ATP hydrolysis in which two of the three beta subunits have the "Closed" conformation simultaneously (CC conformation) [S.P. Tsunoda, E. Muneyuki, T. Amano, M. Yoshida, H. Noji, Cross-linking of two beta subunits in the closed conformation in F1-ATPase, J. Biol. Chem. 274 (1999) 5701-5706]. This was examined by the inter-subunit disulfide cross-linking between two mutant beta(I386C)s that was formed readily only when the enzyme was in the CC conformation. Here, we adopted the same method for the holoenzyme F0F1 from Bacillus PS3 and found that the CC conformation was generated during ATP hydrolysis but barely during ATP synthesis. The experiments using F0F1 with the epsilon subunit lacking C-terminal helices further suggest that this difference is related to dynamic nature of the epsilon subunit and that ATP synthesis is accelerated when it takes the pathway involving the CC conformation.  相似文献   

6.
The catalytic site of Escherichia coli F1 was probed using a reactive ATP analogue, adenosine triphosphopyridoxal (AP3-PL). For complete loss of enzyme activity, about 1 mol of AP3-PL bound to 1 mol of F1 was estimated to be required in the presence or absence of Mg2+. About 70% of the label was bound to the alpha subunit and the rest to the beta subunit in the absence of Mg2+, and the alpha Lys-201 and beta Lys-155 residues, respectively, were the major target residues (Tagaya, M., Noumi, T., Nakano, K., Futai, M., and Fukui, T. (1988) FEBS Lett. 233, 347-351). Addition of Mg2+ decreased the AP3-PL concentration required for half-maximal inhibition, and predominant labeling of the beta subunit (beta Lys-155 and beta Lys-201) with the reagent. ATP and ADP were protective ligands in the presence and absence of Mg2+. The alpha subunit mutation (alpha Lys-201----Gln or alpha Lys-201 deletion) were active in oxidative phosphorylation. However, purified mutant F1s showed impaired low multi-site activity, although their uni-site catalyses were essentially normal. Thus alpha Lys-201 is not a catalytic residue, but may be important for catalytic cooperativity. Mutant F1s were inhibited less by AP3-PL in the absence of Mg2+, and consistent with this, modifications of their alpha subunits by AP3-PL were reduced. AP3-PL was more inhibitory to the mutant enzymes in the presence of Mg2+, and bound to the beta Lys-155 and beta Lys-201 residues of mutant F1 (alpha Lys-201----Gln). These results strongly suggest that alpha Lys-201, beta Lys-155, and beta Lys-201 are located close together near the gamma-phosphate group of ATP bound to the catalytic site, and that the two beta residues and the gamma-phosphate group become closer to each other in the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

7.
In the crystal structure of bovine mitochondrial F(1)-ATPase (MF(1)) (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628), the side chain oxygen of betaThr(163) interacts directly with Mg(2+) coordinated to 5'-adenylyl beta, gamma-imidodiphosphate or ADP bound to catalytic sites of beta subunits present in closed conformations. In the unliganded beta subunit present in an open conformation, the hydroxyl of betaThr(163) is hydrogen-bonded to the carboxylate of betaGlu(199). Substitution of betaGlu(201) (equivalent to betaGlu(199) in MF(1)) in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma subcomplex of the F(1)-ATPase from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 with cysteine or valine increases the propensity to entrap inhibitory MgADP in a catalytic site during hydrolysis of 50 microM ATP. These substitutions lower K(m3) (the Michaelis constant for trisite ATP hydrolysis) relative to that of the wild type by 25- and 10-fold, respectively. Fluorescence quenching of alpha(3)(betaE201C/Y341W)(3)gamma and alpha(3)(betaY341W)(3)gamma mutant subcomplexes showed that MgATP and MgADP bind to the third catalytic site of the double mutant with 8.4- and 4.4-fold higher affinity, respectively, than to the single mutant. These comparisons support the hypothesis that the hydrogen bond observed between the side chains of betaThr(163) and betaGlu(199) in the unliganded catalytic site in the crystal structure of MF(1) stabilizes the open conformation of the catalytic site during ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

8.
In the crystal structure of the bovine heart mitochondrial F(1)-ATPase (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628), the two liganded beta subunits, one with MgAMP-PNP bound to the catalytic site (beta(T)) and the other with MgADP bound (beta(D)) have closed conformations. The empty beta subunit (beta(E)) has an open conformation. In beta(T) and beta(D), the distance between the carboxylate of beta-Asp(315) and the guanidinium of beta-Arg(337) is 3.0-4.0 A. These side chains are at least 10 A apart in beta(E). The alpha(3)(betaD311C/R333C)(3)gamma subcomplex of TF(1) with the corresponding residues substituted with cysteine has very low ATPase activity unless it is reduced prior to assay or assayed in the presence of dithiothreitol. The reduced subcomplex hydrolyzes ATP at 50% the rate of wild-type and is rapidly inactivated by oxidation by CuCl(2) with or without magnesium nucleotides bound to catalytic sites. Titration of the subcomplex with iodo[(14)C]acetamide after prolonged treatment with CuCl(2) in the presence or absence of 1 mM MgADP revealed nearly two free sulfhydryl groups/mol of enzyme. Therefore, one pair of introduced cysteines is located on a beta subunit that exists in the open or partially open conformation even when catalytic sites are saturated with MgADP. Since V(max) of ATP hydrolysis is attained when three catalytic sites of F(1) are saturated, the catalytic site that binds ATP must be closing as the catalytic site that releases products is opening.  相似文献   

9.
In mitochondria, the hydrolytic activity of ATP synthase is prevented by an inhibitor protein, IF1. The active bovine protein (84 amino acids) is an alpha-helical dimer with monomers associated via an antiparallel alpha-helical coiled coil composed of residues 49-81. The N-terminal inhibitory sequences in the active dimer bind to two F1-ATPases in the presence of ATP. In the crystal structure of the F1-IF1 complex at 2.8 A resolution, residues 1-37 of IF1 bind in the alpha(DP)-beta(DP) interface of F1-ATPase, and also contact the central gamma subunit. The inhibitor opens the catalytic interface between the alpha(DP) and beta(DP) subunits relative to previous structures. The presence of ATP in the catalytic site of the beta(DP) subunit implies that the inhibited state represents a pre-hydrolysis step on the catalytic pathway of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
This review concerns the catalytic sector of F1 factor of the H+-dependent ATPases in mitochondria (MF1), bacteria (BF1) and chloroplasts (CF1). The three types of F1 have many similarities with respect to the structural parameters, subunit composition and catalytic mechanism. An alpha 3 beta 3 gamma delta epsilon stoichiometry is now accepted for MF1 and BF1; the alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2 delta 2 epsilon 2 stoichiometry for CF1 remains as matter of debate. The major subunits alpha, beta and gamma are equivalent in MF1, BF1 and CF1; this is not the case for the minor subunits delta and epsilon. The delta subunit of MF1 corresponds to the epsilon subunit of BF1 and CF1, whereas the mitochondrial subunit equivalent to the delta subunit of BF1 and CF1 is probably the oligomycin sensitivity conferring protein (OSCP). The alpha beta gamma assembly is endowed with ATPase activity, beta being considered as the catalytic subunit and gamma as a proton gate. On the other hand, the delta and epsilon subunits of BF1 and CF1 most probably act as links between the F1 and F0 sectors of the ATPase complex. The natural mitochondrial ATPase inhibitor, which is a separate protein loosely attached to MF1, could have its counterpart in the epsilon subunit of BF1 and CF1. The generally accepted view that the catalytic subunit in the different F1 species is beta comes from a number of approaches, including chemical modification, specific photolabeling and, in the case of BF1, use of mutants. The alpha subunit also plays a central role in catalysis, since structural alteration of alpha by chemical modification or mutation results in loss of activity of the whole molecule of F1. The notion that the proton motive force generated by respiration is required for conformational changes of the F1 sector of the H+-ATPase complex has gained acceptance. During the course of ATP synthesis, conversion of bound ADP and Pi into bound ATP probably requires little energy input; only the release of the F1-bound ATP would consume energy. ADP and Pi most likely bind at one catalytic site of F1, while ATP is released at another site. This mechanism, which underlines the alternating cooperativity of subunits in F1, is supported by kinetic data and also by the demonstration of partial site reactivity in inactivation experiments performed with selective chemical modifiers. One obvious advantage of the alternating site mechanism is that the released ATP cannot bind to its original site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
F-ATPases synthesize ATP from ADP and phosphate coupled with an electrochemical proton gradient in bacterial or mitochondrial membranes and can hydrolyse ATP to form the gradient. F-ATPases consist of a catalytic F1 and proton channel F0 formed from the alpha3beta3gammadelta and ab2c10 subunit complexes, respectively. The rotation of gammaepsilonc10 couples catalyses and proton transport. Consistent with the threefold symmetry of the alpha3beta3 catalytic hexamer, 120 degrees stepped revolution has been observed, each step being divided into two substeps. The ATP-dependent revolution exhibited stochastic fluctuation and was driven by conformation transmission of the beta subunit (phosphate-binding P-loop/alpha-helix B/loop/beta-sheet4). Recent results regarding mechanically driven ATP synthesis finally proved the role of rotation in energy coupling.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of aurovertin on the binding parameters of ADP and ATP to native F1 from beef heart mitochondria in the presence of EDTA has been explored. Three exchangeable sites per F1 were titrated by ADP and ATP in the absence or presence of aurovertin. Curvilinear Scatchard plots for the binding of both ADP and ATP were obtained in the absence of aurovertin, indicating one high affinity site (Kd for ADP = 0.6-0.8 microM; Kd for ATP = 0.3-0.5 microM) and two lower affinity sites (Kd for ADP = 8-10 microM; Kd for ATP = 7-10 microM). With a saturating concentration of aurovertin capable of filling the three beta subunits of F1, the curvilinearity of the Scatchard plots was decreased for ATP binding and abolished for ADP binding, indicating homogeneity of ADP binding sites in the F1-aurovertin complex (Kd for ADP = 2 microM). When only the high affinity aurovertin site was occupied, maximal enhancement of the fluorescence of the F1-aurovertin complex was attained with 1 mol of ADP bound per mol of F1 and maximal quenching for 1 mol of ATP bound per mol of F1. When the F1-aurovertin complex was incubated with [3H]ADP followed by [14C]ATP, full fluorescence quenching was attained when ATP had displaced the previously bound ADP. In the case of the isolated beta subunit, both ADP and ATP enhanced the fluorescence of the beta subunit-aurovertin complex. The Kd values for ADP and ATP in the presence of EDTA were 0.6 mM and 3.7 mM, respectively; MgCl2 decreased the Kd values to 0.1 mM for both ADP and ATP. It is postulated that native F1 possesses three equivalent interacting nucleotide binding sites and exists in two conformations which are in equilibrium and recognize either ATP (T conformation) or ADP (D conformation). The negative interactions between the nucleotide binding sites of F1 are strongest in the D conformation. Upon addition of aurovertin, the site-site cooperativity between the beta subunits of F1 is decreased or even abolished.  相似文献   

13.
Normal modes have been used to explore the inherent flexibility of the alpha, beta and gamma subunits of F(1)-ATPase in isolation and as part of the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex. It was found that the structural plasticity of the gamma and beta subunits, in particular, correlates with their functions. The N and C-terminal helices forming the coiled-coil domain of the gamma subunit are highly flexible in the isolated subunit, but more rigid in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex due to interactions with other subunits. The globular domain of the gamma subunit is structurally relatively rigid when isolated and in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex; this is important for its functional role in coupling the F(0) and F(1) complex of ATP synthase and in inducing the conformational changes of the beta subunits in synthesis. Most important, the character of the lowest-frequency modes of the beta(E) subunit is highly correlated with the large beta(E) --> beta(TP) transition. This holds for the C-terminal domain and the nucleotide-binding domain, which undergo significant conformational transitions in the functional cycle of F(1)-ATPase. This is most evident in the ligand-free beta(E) subunit; the flexibility in the nucleotide-binding domain is reduced somewhat in the beta(TP) subunit in the presence of Mg(2+).ATP. The low-frequency modes of the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex show that the motions of the globular domain of the gamma subunit and of the C-terminal and nucleotide binding domains of the beta(E) subunits are coupled, in accord with their function. Overall, the normal mode analysis reveals that F(1)-ATPase, like other macromolecular assemblies, has the intrinsic structural flexibility required for its function encoded in its sequence and three-dimensional structure. This inherent plasticity is an essential aspect of assuring a small free energy cost for the large-scale conformational transition that occurs in molecular motors.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphofructokinase: structure and control   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Phosphofructokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus shows cooperative kinetics with respect to the substrate fructose-6-phosphate (F6P), allosteric activation by ADP, and inhibition by phosphoenolpyruvate. The crystal structure of the active conformation of the enzyme has been solved to 2.4 A resolution, and three ligand-binding sites have been located. Two of these form the active site and bind the substrates F6P and ATP. The third site binds both allosteric activator and inhibitor. The complex of the enzyme with F6P and ADP has been partly refined at 2.4 A resolution, and a model of ATP has been built into the active site by using the refined model of ADP and a 6 A resolution map of bound 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP). The gamma-phosphate of ATP is close to the 1-hydroxyl of F6P, in a suitable position for in-line phosphoryl transfer. The binding of the phosphate of F6P involves two arginines from a neighbouring subunit in the tetramer, which suggests that a rearrangement of the subunits could explain the cooperativity of substrate binding. The activatory ADP is also bound by residues from two subunits.  相似文献   

15.
The total amount of bound exchangeable and nonexchangeable adenine nucleotides in Escherichia coli F1-ATPase (BF1) was determined; three exchangeable nucleotides were assessed by equilibrium dialysis in a [14C]ADP-supplemented medium. When BF1 was purified in a medium supplemented with ATP, a stoichiometry of nearly 6 mol of bound nucleotides/mol of enzyme was found; three of the bound nucleotides were ATP and the others ADP. When BF1 was filtered on Sephadex G-50 in a glycerol medium (Garrett, N.E., and Penefsky, H.S. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 6640-6647), bound ADP was rapidly released, in contrast to bound ATP which remained firmly attached to the enzyme. Upon incubation of BF1 with [14C]ADP, the bound ADP rather than the bound ATP was exchanged. Of the three [14C]ADPs which have bound to BF1 by exchange after equilibrium dialysis, one was readily lost by gel filtration on Sephadex G-50; the loss of bound [14C]ADP was markedly reduced by incubation of BF1 with aurovertin, a specific ligand of the beta subunit which is known to increase the affinity of the beta subunit for nucleotides (Issartel, J.-P., and Vignais, P. V. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6591-6595). Upon photoirradiation of BF1 with [alpha-32P]2-azido-ADP, only the beta subunit was labeled; concomitantly, bound ADP was released, but the content in bound ATP remained stable. These results suggest that specific sites located on the three beta subunits bind nucleotides in a reversible manner. Consequently, the tightly bound ATP of native BF1 would be located on the alpha subunits.  相似文献   

16.
An extremely small reaction chamber with a volume of a few femtoliters was developed for a highly sensitive detection of biological reaction. By encapsulating a single F(1)-ATPase (F(1)) molecule with ADP and an inorganic phosphate in the chamber, the chemomechanical coupling efficiency of ATP synthesis catalyzed by reversely rotated F(1) was successfully determined (Rondelez et al., 2005a, Nature, 444, 773-777). While the alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex of F(1) generated ATP with a low efficiency (approximately 10%), inclusion of the epsilon subunit into the subcomplex enhanced the efficiency up to 77%. This raises a new question about the mechanism of F(0)F(1)-ATP synthase (F(0)F(1)): How does the epsilon subunit support the highly coupled ATP synthesis of F(1)? To address this question, we measured the conformational dynamics of the epsilon subunit using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) at the single-molecule level. The experimental data revealed epsilon changes the conformation of its C-terminus helices in a nucleotide-dependent manner. It is plausible that the conformational change of epsilon switches the catalytic mode of F(0)F(1) for highly coupled ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Motor proteins, myosin, and kinesin have gamma-phosphate sensors in the switch II loop that play key roles in conformational changes that support motility. Here we report that a rotary motor, F1-ATPase, also changes its conformations upon phosphate release. The tryptophan mutation was introduced into Arg-333 in the beta subunit of F1-ATPase from thermophilic Bacillus PS3 as a probe of conformational changes. This residue interacts with the switch II loop (residues 308-315) of the beta subunit in a nucleotide-bound conformation. The addition of ATP to the mutant F1 subcomplex alpha3beta(R333W)3gamma caused transient increase and subsequent decay of the Trp fluorescence. The increase was caused by conformational changes on ATP binding. The rate of decay agreed well with that of phosphate release monitored by phosphate-binding protein assays. This is the first evidence that the beta subunit changes its conformation upon phosphate release, which may share a common mechanism of exerting motility with other motor proteins.  相似文献   

19.
1. 8-Azido-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (n83ATP) is a suitable photoaffinity label for F1 ATPase from Micrococcus luteus. The nucleotide is a substrate in the presence of bivalent cations and inhibits the enzyme irreversibly upon irradiation with ultraviolet light above 300 nm. 2. More than 80% of the label is covalently bound to the beta subunits in the presence of bivalent cations. Labeling and inactivation is decreased by protection with ADP, ATP or adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate. To a much smaller degree the alpha subunits also become labeled. 3. n83AMP does not specifically bind to the beta subunits upon irradiation. Like n83ATP and n83ADP, it also labels the alpha subunits to a small extent. 4. The F1 ATPase is inactivated after a single beta subunit per F1 complex has become labeled. A cooperativity of the beta subunits carrying nucleotide binding sites is suggested.  相似文献   

20.
Eukaryotic cells require mitochondrial compartments for viability. However, the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is able to survive when mitochondrial DNA suffers substantial deletions or is completely absent, so long as a sufficient mitochondrial inner membrane potential is generated. In the absence of functional mitochondrial DNA, and consequently a functional electron transport chain and F(1)F(o)-ATPase, the essential electrical potential is maintained by the electrogenic exchange of ATP(4-) for ADP(3-) through the adenine nucleotide translocator. An essential aspect of this electrogenic process is the conversion of ATP(4-) to ADP(3-) in the mitochondrial matrix, and the nuclear-encoded subunits of F(1)-ATPase are hypothesized to be required for this process in vivo. Deletion of ATP3, the structural gene for the gamma subunit of the F(1)-ATPase, causes yeast to quantitatively lose mitochondrial DNA and grow extremely slowly, presumably by interfering with the generation of an energized inner membrane. A spontaneous suppressor of this slow-growth phenotype was found to convert a conserved glycine to serine in the beta subunit of F(1)-ATPase (atp2-227). This mutation allowed substantial ATP hydrolysis by the F(1)-ATPase even in the absence of the gamma subunit, enabling yeast to generate a twofold greater inner membrane potential in response to ATP compared to mitochondria isolated from yeast lacking the gamma subunit and containing wild-type beta subunits. Analysis of the suppressing mutation by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis also revealed that the alpha(3)beta(3) heterohexamer can form in the absence of the gamma subunit.  相似文献   

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