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1.
Combined evidence obtained from the measurements of pyrophosphate hydrolysis and synthesis, oxygen exchange between phosphate and water, enzyme-bound pyrophosphate formation and Mg2+ binding enabled us to deduce the overall scheme of catalysis by Escherichia coli inorganic pyrophosphatase in the presence of Mg2+. We determined the equilibrium constants for Mg2+ binding to various enzyme species and forward and reverse rate constants for the four steps of the catalytic reaction, namely, binding/release of PPi, hydrolysis/synthesis of PPi and successive binding/release of two Pi molecules. Catalysis by the E. coli enzyme in both directions, in contrast to baker's yeast pyrophosphatase, occurs via a single pathway, which requires the binding of Mg2+ to the sites of four types. Three of them can be filled in the absence of the substrates, and the affinity of one of them to Mg2+ is increased by two orders of magnitude in the enzyme-substrate complexes. The distribution of 18O-labelled phosphate isotopomers during the exchange indicated that hydrolysis of pyrophosphate in the active site is appreciably reversible. The equilibrium constant for this process estimated from direct measurements is 5.0. The ratio of the maximal velocities of pyrophosphate hydrolysis and synthesis is 69. The rate of the synthesis is almost entirely determined by the rate of the release of pyrophosphate from the enzyme. In the hydrolytic reaction, enzyme-bound pyrophosphate hydrolysis and successive release of two phosphate molecules proceed with nearly equal rate constants.  相似文献   

2.
We have developed two methods for quantitatively measuring inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) in the presence of 10(3)--10(4) molar excesses of inorganic phosphate (Pi) and used them to measure the extent of enzyme-bound pyrophosphate (EPPi) formation in solutions of yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase and Pi. We have also measured the rate of enzyme-catalyzed H2O--phosphate oxygen exchange. We find both processes to have essentially identical dependence on Mg2+ and Pi concentrations, thus providing important confirmation for the recent proposal by Janson et al. (1979) that oxygen exchange proceeds via EPPi formation. Our results are consistent with a model in which three Mg2+ per active site are required for EPPi formation but inconsistent with a model requiring only two Mg2+ per active site and permit the formulation of an overall scheme for inorganic pyrophosphatase catalysis of PPi--Pi equilibration as well as the evaluation of equilibrium and rate constants in this scheme. The major results and conclusions of our work are the following: (a) the equilibrium constant for PPi (enzyme-bound) in equilibrium with 2Pi (enzyme-bound) is 4.8; (b) following PPi hydrolysis, the first released Pi contains an oxygen from solvent water; (c) the steps for PPi hydrolysis on the enzyme and for release of both product Pi's are all partially rate determining in overall enzyme-catalyzed PPi hydrolysis; (d) PPi formation on the enzyme is rate determining for H2O--Pi oxygen exchange; (e) PPi dissociation from the enzyme is very slow and is the rate-determining step in Pi--PPi exchange (Cohn, 1958; Janson et al., 1979). This also accounts for the observation that the calculated dissociation constant for MgPPi complex binding to enzyme is considerably lower than the measured Km for enzyme-catalyzed MgPPi hydrolysis.  相似文献   

3.
The unadenylylated, manganese form of glutamine synthetase (L-glutamate: ammonia ligase (ADP forming), EC 6.3.1.2 from Escherichia coli catalyzes a novel, AMP-dependent (reversible) synthesis of pyrophosphate and L-glutamate from orthophosphate and L-glutamine: Formula (See Text). The hydrolysis of the L-glutamine amide bond is coupled to the stoichiometric synthesis of pyrophosphate, although as PPi accumulates, additional hydrolysis of L-glutamine occurs in a secondary reaction catalyzed by the [manganese x enzyme x AMP x PPi] complex. The synthesis of PPi probably occurs at the subunit catalytic site in the positions normally occupied by the beta, gamma-phosphates of ATP. To promote PPi synthesis, AMP apparently binds to the subunit catalytic site rather than to the allosteric inhibitor site; equilibrium binding results suggest that Pi directs the binding of AMP to the active site. In this reaction, Mg2+ will not substitute for Mn2+, and adenylylated glutamine synthetase is inactive. Pyrophosphate is synthesized by the unadenylylated, manganese enzyme at approximately 2% of the rate of that of ATP in the reverse biosynthetic reaction. If P1 is replaced by arsenate, the enzymatic rate of the AMP-supported hydrolysis of L-glutamine is 100-fold faster than is PPi synthesis and is one-half the rate of the ADP-supported, irreversible arsenolysis of L-glutamine. This latter activity also is supported by GMP and IMP, suggesting that the catalytic site of glutamine synthetase has a rather broad specificity for the nucleotide base. The reactions supported by AMP directly relate to the mechanism of glutamine synthetase catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
Inorganic pyrophosphatase must bind two phosphate molecules in order to catalyze pyrophosphate synthesis. In this report it is shown that Pi causes marked effect on the absorption spectrum of baker's yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase and this effect can be used to analyze Pi binding to this enzyme. A series of absorbance versus Pi concentration curves in the presence of 0.5-20 mM free Mg2+ were obtained at pH 7.2 and computer-fitted to 19 models. The dissociation constant of magnesium phosphate (8.5 +/- 0.4 mM) used in this analysis was measured with a Mg2+-sensitive electrode. The best model implies successive binding of two magnesium phosphate molecules or random-order binding of magnesium phosphate and free phosphate molecules. The first route predominates at physiological concentrations of Mg2+. The Pi-inhibition pattern of pyrophosphate hydrolysis confirmed that Pi adds to the active site and provided further evidence for the existence of an activating Pi-binding site. The possibility is raised that the pathways of pyrophosphate synthesis and hydrolysis by inorganic pyrophosphatase may differ in the sense that the binding of the fourth metal ion/subunit may facilitate the synthesis and inhibit the hydrolysis.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the kinetics of "unisite" ATP hydrolysis and synthesis in seven mutant Escherichia coli F1-ATPase enzymes. The seven mutations are distributed over a 105-residue segment of the catalytic nucleotide-binding domain in beta-subunit and are: G142S, K155Q, K155E, E181Q, E192Q, M209I, and R246C. We report forward and reverse rate constants and equilibrium constants in all seven mutant enzymes for the four steps of unisite kinetics, namely (i) ATP binding/release, (ii) ATP hydrolysis/synthesis, (iii) Pi release/binding, and (iv) ADP release/binding. The seven mutant enzymes displayed a wide range of deviations from normal in both rate and equilibrium constants, with no discernible common pattern. Notably, steep reductions in Kd ATP were seen in some cases, the value of Kd Pi was high, and K2 (ATP hydrolysis/synthesis) was relatively unaffected. Significantly, when the data from the seven mutations were combined with previous data from two other E. coli F1-beta-subunit mutations (D242N, D242V), normal E. coli F1, soluble and membranous mitochondrial F1, it was found that linear free energy relationships obtained for both ATP binding/release (log k+1 versus log K1) and ADP binding/release (log k-4 versus log K-4). Two conclusions follow. 1) The seven mutations studied here cause subtle changes in interactions between the catalytic nucleotide-binding domain and substrate ATP or product ADP. 2) The mitochondrial, normal E. coli, and nine total beta-subunit mutant enzymes represent a continuum in which subtle structural differences in the catalytic site resulted in changes in binding energy; therefore insights into the nature of energy coupling during ATP hydrolysis and synthesis by F1-ATPase may be ascertained by detailed studies of this group of enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
Yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase, with 10 mM 32Pi and 10 mM Mg2+ present at pH 7.3 TO 7.6, rapidly forms enzyme-bound pyrophosphate equivalent to about 5% of the total catalytic sties on the two enzyme subunits. The enzyme thus appears to bind PPi so as to favor thermodynamically its formation from Pi. The enzyme catalyzes a measurable equilibrium formation of free PPi at a much slower rate. Under similar conditions, the enzyme catalyzes a rapid exchange of oxygen atoms between Pi and water with the relative activation by metals being Mg2+ greater than Zn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mn2+. Millisecond mixing and quenching experiments demonstrate that the rate of formation and cleavage of the enzyme-bound PPi is rapid enough to explain most or all of the oxygen exchange reaction.  相似文献   

7.
A scheme of Mg2+ and Pi binding to yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase has been deduced from the concentration dependencies of the rate of oxygen exchange between Pi and water. The exchange reaction requires the binding of MgPi and free Pi (pathway I) or two MgPi (pathway II) in addition to two Mg2+ ions bound in the absence of Pi. Pathway II predominates above 0.16 mM Mg2+. The rate of formation of bound PPi from bound Pi for pathway II is three times as high as that for pathway I. The results suggest that the binding of the fourth Mg2+ ion to pyrophosphatase stimulates its synthetic vs its hydrolytic capability.  相似文献   

8.
A Mg2+ dependent inorganic pyrophosphatase from chloroplasts of Sorghum vulgare has been purified 275-fold to electrophoretic purity with an overall recovery of about 25% activity. Estimations of native and monomeric relative molecular weights by size exclusion chromatography and denaturing electrophoresis suggest that the holoenzyme is a monomer of 42 +/- 1.5 kDa. A high specificity for tetrasodium pyrophosphate (PPi) as substrate has been observed, as the other phosphoesters tested were virtually unaffected. The Mg2+:PPi ratio of 5:1 at pH 8.0 shifts to 2.5:1.0 at pH 9.0 and 10:1 at pH 7.0. None of the divalent cations tested could substitute for Mg2+. Further, in the presence of Mg2+, these divalent cations inhibit the catalytic hydrolysis of PPi. EDTA rapidly and irreversibly inactivates the purified enzyme in a biphasic manner. Of the metabolites tested, Pi and L-malate significantly inhibited the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Malate inhibits the enzyme through an allosteric mechanism. A Hill plot of this inhibition shows that at least two molecules of malate bind to each molecule of the purified enzyme. The likely physiological significance of this result is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
A method is described for determination of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) in cell culture medium and in rabbit articular chondrocytes grown in the presence of radioactive orthophosphate (32Pi). Intra- and extracellular 32PPi formed was measured using high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) separation of the PPi from orthophosphate (Pi) and other phosphate-containing compounds. The chromatographic separation on a weak anion-exchange column is based on the extent to which various phosphate compounds form complexes with Mg2+ at low pH and the rate at which such formation occurs. These complexes are eluted more readily than the uncomplexed compounds. Best results were obtained using a simultaneous gradient of Mg2+ ions and ionic strength. In this case separation of small amounts of PPi from a large excess of Pi was possible without prior removal of Pi or extraction of the PPi fraction. The assay is also useful for measurement of inorganic pyrophosphatase activity. The sensitivity of the assay depends on the specific activity of the added 32Pi and on the culture conditions, but is comparable with the most sensitive of the enzymatic assays. Sample preparation, particularly deproteinization, proved to be of importance. The losses of PPi which occur during procedures of this sort due to hydrolysis and coprecipitation were quantitated.  相似文献   

10.
A theoretical analysis has been derived which allows the analytical calculation of the complete distribution of 18O-labeled Pi species expected to occur during medium Pi equilibrium HOH exchange of [18O]Pi and to be produced by intermediate Pi equilibrium HOH exchange during net hydrolysis of [18O]PPi or other labeled phosphate compounds. The observed distributions with catalysis by yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase are found to agree closely with the theoretical values indicating that the exchange reaction can be adequately described by a unique value of the partitioning of bound Pi between release from the enzyme versus formation of bound PPi with loss of an oxygen to the water. The limitations on the exclusion of other mechanisms are discussed. The extent of this partitioning does change, however, under some experimental conditions. At low pH, with activation by Mg2+ or Mn2+, the relative rate of release of Pi is found to increase. The extent of exchange is also dependent on the nature of the activating metal, being greatest with Co2+. During PPi hydrolysis with PPi in excess over Mg2+, a shift to lower extents of exchange is observed.  相似文献   

11.
Some kinetic and spectral approaches have been used to study the interactions in the enzyme-Mg2+-F--pyrophosphate (or imidodiphosphate, a non-hydrolyzeable pyrophosphate analog) system underlying the mechanism of yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase inhibition by fluoride. The continuous curves of the enzymatic reaction were obtained with an automatic phosphate analyzer operating on the time scale of seconds. Increasing concentrations of NaF caused an increase in the inactivation rate constant to a constant level of 5.3 min-1 for PPi (pH 6.2-7.2) and 3.9 min-1 for imidodiphosphate, (pH 7.2). At a saturating fluoride concentration, the initial rate of PPi hydrolysis dropped to 10%. NaF and imidodiphosphate changed the protein spectrum at 270-310 nm and strengthened the binding of each other to the protein. The binding of F- required a Mg2+-binding site with Kd = 0.15 mM being filled in. The free enzyme and its Ca2+ complex did not bind F-. The experimental results indicate that pyrophosphatase inhibition by fluoride occurs in two steps. The inhibitor adds first to the Mg2+ ion on the enzyme in a readily reversible reaction causing a 90% decrease of the catalytic activity. Thereafter, a slow isomerization of the enzymesubstrate complex takes place, resulting in a complete loss of activity.  相似文献   

12.
In order to determine the concentration of pyrophosphate (PPi) and its subcellular distribution in Chara corallina, a new method to concentrate PPi from cell extracts was developed. PPi was extracted and concentrated as Ca2P2O7 under alkaline conditions. The amount of PPi in the precipitate was measured using an enzyme system containing pyrophosphate:fructose-6-phosphate 1-phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.90) coupled to NADH oxidation in the presence of [ethylene-bis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid. The subcellular localization of PPi and inorganic phosphate (Pi) was studied using the intracellular perfusion technique. The relative volumes of the cytoplasm (6.4%) and the vacuole (93.6%) were determined by perfusing Lucifer Yellow CH into the vacuole and by assuming that the Lucifer Yellow CH dead space represented the cytoplasmic volume. The volume of the chloroplast layer was determined microscopically, and it was found that it occupied 10% of the Chara cytoplasm. PPi was present predominantly in the cytosol at a level of 193 microM, while it existed in the vacuole at a level of only 2.20 microM and less than 1 microM in chloroplasts. By contrast, Pi was distributed almost equally in the cytosol (12.0 mM), chloroplasts (16.2 mM), and the vacuole (6.70 mM). The electrochemical potential gradient across the tonoplast for H+ (delta mu H+ = -11.6 to -18.0 KJ/mol) was nearly equal to the free energy release from the hydrolysis of PPi in cytoplasm (delta Gpp = -18.9 KJ/mol), indicating that the H+-translocating inorganic pyrophosphatase can work as a H+ pump in C. corallina.  相似文献   

13.
Contribution of water to free energy of hydrolysis of pyrophosphate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The energy of hydrolysis of phosphate compounds varies depending on whether they are in solution or bound to the catalytic site of enzymes. With the purpose of simulating the conditions at the catalytic site, the observed equilibrium constant for pyrophosphate hydrolysis (Kobsd) was measured in aqueous mixtures of dimethyl sulfoxide, ethylene glycol, or polymers of ethylene glycol. The reaction was catalyzed by yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase at 30 degrees C. All the cosolvents used promoted a decrease of Kobsd. Polymers of ethylene glycol were more effective than dimethyl sulfoxide or ethylene glycol in decreasing Kobsd. The higher the molecular weight of the polymer, the lower the value of Kobsd. A decrease in Kobsd from 346 M (delta G degree obsd = -3.5 kcal mol-1) to 0.1 M (delta G degree obsd = 1.3 kcal mol-1) was observed after the addition of 50% (w/v) poly(ethylene glycol) 8000 to a solution containing 0.9 mM MgCl2 and 1 mM Pi at pH 8.0. The association constants of Pi and pyrophosphate for H+ and Mg2+ were measured in presence of different ethylene glycol concentrations in order to calculate the Keq for hydrolysis of different ionic species of pyrophosphate. A decrease in all the Keq was observed. The results are interpreted according to the concept that the energy of hydrolysis of phosphate compounds depends on the different solvation energies of reactants and products.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The enzyme-like kinetic properties of precipitated magnesium phosphate as a catalyst for formation of pyrophosphate (PPi) from phospho (enol)pyruvate (PEP) are described. This synthesis occurs at a low temperature (37°C) and represents a model that may help us understand the relevance to chemical evolution of minerals as ancient catalysts whose functions could have been taken over by contemporary enzymes. An insoluble Pi.Mg matrix was formed in a medium with 80% of the water replaced by dimethyl sulfoxide as a way of simulating conditions in a drying pond. Phospho(enol)pyruvate adsorbs onto the Pi.Mg surface according to a Langmuir isotherm, and the PEP concentration dependence of PPi formation follows a Michaelian-like function. A yield of 33% for transformation of the initially adsorbed PEP into PPi was attained after 4 days of incubation with equimolecular concentrations of Pi, MgCl2, and PEP. The magnesium concentration dependence for Pi and Mg precipitation, for adsorption of PEP onto solid Pi.Mg, and for PPi formation showed complex cooperative behavior. These results taken as a whole lead to the conclusion that the Pi.Mg surface not only provides a reactant for PPi formation but also catalyzes the reaction.Offprint requests to: A. Vieyra  相似文献   

15.
A continuous, coupled, spectrophotometric assay is described in which the enzyme ATP sulfurylase is employed to measure the concentration of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) at equilibrium with known concentrations of inorganic orthophosphate (Pi) in the presence of excess inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPitase). In agreement with previous reports, the apparent equilibrium constant (Keq,app) of the PPi hydrolysis reaction was shown to decrease as the concentration of Mg2+ is increased. At pH 7.3, 30 degrees C, in the presence of 150 mM NaCl and 1 mM free Mg2+, Keq,app (calculated as [Pi]t2/[PPi]t) was 1950. Measurements of Keq,app at different total concentrations of Mg2+ and Pi permitted the determination of K0, the dissociation constant of the Mg-Pi complex. In 0.05 M Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, at 30 degrees C, K0 was 3.6 mM. In the presence of excess ATP sulfurylase, yeast PPitase catalyzed PPi formation from Pi with a specific activity (Vmax) of 9 units X mg protein-1 at pH 8.0, 30 degrees C, and 1 mM free Mg2+. Half-maximum reverse reaction velocity was observed at a total Pi concentration of 18 mM. (Under the same conditions, Vmax of the PPi hydrolysis reaction was 530 units X mg protein-1.) A radiochemical end point ("reaction-to-completion") assay for measuring unknown concentrations of PPi was devised. In the presence of excess 35S-adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate ([35S]APS) as the cosubstrate, 35SO2-4 formation was stoichiometric with added PPi. (The 35SO2-4 and [35S]APS are separated by adsorption of the latter onto charcoal.) The sensitivity of the assay can be adjusted by varying the specific radioactivity of the [35S]APS. In the absence of interfering substances, as little as 2 pmol of PPi per 1.0 ml assay volume can be measured. The sensitivity of the assay is reduced in the presence of ATP plus perchlorate (which synergistically inhibit the enzyme). However, if the bulk of the ATP is removed from perchloric acid extracts of tissues with glucose and hexokinase, initial intracellular levels as low as 1 microM can be measured. The possibility that most of the cellular PPi extracted with perchloric acid was originally enzyme bound is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
L Michel  J Garin  J P Issartel  P V Vignais 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):10022-10028
4-Azido-2-nitrophenyl pyrophosphate (azido-PPi) labeled with 32P in the alpha position was prepared and used to photolabel beef heart mitochondrial F1. Azido-PPi was hydrolyzed by yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase, but not by mitochondrial F1-ATPase. Incubation of F1 with [alpha-32P]azido-PPi in the dark under conditions of saturation resulted in the binding of the photoprobe to three sites, two of which exhibited a high affinity (Kd = 2 microM), the third one having a lower affinity (Kd = 300 microM). Mg2+ was required for binding. As with PPi [Issartel et al. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 13538-13544], the binding of 3 mol of azido-PPi/mol of F1 resulted in the release of one tightly bound nucleotide. ADP, AMP-PNP, and PPi competed with azido-PPi for binding to F1, but Pi and the phosphate analogue azidonitrophenyl phosphate did not. The binding of [32P]Pi to F1 was enhanced at low concentrations of azido-PPi, as it was in the presence of low concentrations of PPi. Sulfite, which is thought to bind to an anion-binding site on F1, inhibited competitively the binding of both ADP and azido-PPi, suggesting that the postulated anion-binding site of F1 is related to the exchangeable nucleotide-binding sites. Upon photoirradiation of F1 in the presence of [alpha-32P]azido-PPi, the photoprobe became covalently bound with concomitant inactivation of F1. The plots relating the inactivation of F1 to the covalent binding of the probe were rectilinear up to 50% inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The energy derived from pyrophosphate (PPi) hydrolysis is used to pump protons across the tonoplast membrane, thus forming a proton gradient. In a plant's cytosol, the concentration of PPi varies between 10 and 800 microm, and the PPi concentration needed for one-half maximal activity of the maize (Zea mays) root tonoplast H+-pyrophosphatase is 30 microm. In this report, we show that the H+-pyrophosphatase of maize root vacuoles is able to hydrolyze PPi (Reaction 2) formed by Reaction 1, which is catalyzed by PPi-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFP): Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F1,6BP) + Pi <--> PPi +Fructose-6-phosphate (F6 P) (reaction 1) PPi --> 2 Pi (reaction 2) H+cyt --> H+vac (reaction 3) F1,6BP + H+cyt <--> H+vac + F6P + Pi (reaction 4) During the steady state, one-half of the inorganic phosphate released (Reaction 4) is ultimately derived from F1,6BP, whereas PFP continuously regenerates the pyrophosphate (PPi) hydrolyzed. A proton gradient (DeltapH) can be built up in tonoplast vesicles using PFP as a PPi-regenerating system. The Delta pH formed by the H+-pyrophosphatase can be dissipated by addition of 20 mm F6P, which drives Reaction 1 to the left and decreases the PPi available for the H+-pyrophosphatase. The maximal Delta pH attained by the pyrophosphatase coupled to the PFP reaction can be maintained by PFP activities far below those found in higher plants tissues.  相似文献   

18.
The F1 moiety of the rat liver mitochondrial ATP synthase/ATPase complex contains as isolated 2 mol Mg2+/mol F1, 1 mol of which is nonexchangeable and the other which is exchangeable (N. Williams, J. Hullihen, and P.L. Pedersen, (1987) Biochemistry 26, 162-169). In addition, the enzyme binds 1 mol ADP/mol F1 and 3 mol AMP.PNP, the latter of which can bind in complex formation with divalent cation and displace the Mg2+ at the exchangeable site. Thus, in terms of ligand binding sites the fully loaded rat liver F1 complex contains 3 mol MgAMP.PNP, 1 mol ADP, and 1 mol Mg2+. In this study we have used several metal ATP complexes or analogs thereof to gain further insight into the ligand binding domains of rat liver F1 and the mechanism by which it catalyzes ATP hydrolysis in soluble and membrane bound form. Studies with LaATP confirmed that MgATP is the most likely substrate for rat liver F1, and provided evidence that the enzyme may contain additional Mg2+ binding sites, undetected in previous studies of F1-ATPases, that are required for catalytic activity. Thus, F1 containing the thermodynamically stable LaATP complex in place of MgATP requires added Mg2+ to induce ATP hydrolysis. As Mg2+ cannot readily displace La2+ under these conditions there appears to be a catalytically important class of Mg2+ binding sites on rat liver F1, distinct from the nonexchangeable Mg2+ site and the sites involved in binding MgATP. Additional studies carried out with exchange inert metal-nucleotide complexes involving rhodium and the Mg2+ and Cd2+ complexes of ATP beta S and ATP alpha S imply that the rate-limiting step in the ATPase reaction pathway occurs subsequent to the P gamma-O-P beta bond cleavage steps, perhaps at the level of Mg(ADP)(Pi) hydrolysis or MgADP release. Evidence is presented that Mg2+ remains coordinated to the leaving group of the reaction, i.e., the beta phosphoryl group. Finally, in contrast to soluble F1, F1 bound to F0 in the inner mitochondrial membrane failed to discriminate between the Mg2+ complexes of the ATP beta S isomers. This indicates that a fundamental difference may exist between the catalytic or kinetic mechanism of F1 and the more physiologically intact F0F1 complex.  相似文献   

19.
Carbon dioxide-dependent O(2) evolution by isolated pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts was inhibited by inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi). Oxygen evolution was also inhibited by high concentrations of orthophosphate (Pi) and the inhibition was relieved by 3-phosphoglycerate. In contrast, the inhibition by PPi was not relieved by 3-phosphoglycerate, indicating that hydrolysis of PPi and accumulation of inhibitory concentrations of Pi were not occurring. In agreement with this suggestion, the percentage of (14)C-labeled products diffusing out of the chloroplasts was increased by Pi but not by PPi. The inhibition of O(2) evolution by PPi was reversed by ATP. The concentration of PPi required for 50% inhibition was 1.2 to 1.4 mm and the subsequent stimulation by ATP was half-maximal at 16 to 25 mum. Carbon dioxide-dependent O(2) evolution by spinach chloroplasts, or chloroplasts isolated from older pea plants, was not significantly inhibited by PPi.Chloroplasts were preloaded with (14)C-ATP and release of the labeled nucleotides was measured to assess the activity of adenine nucleotide transport across the inner chloroplast envelope membrane. A rapid exchange was promoted by the addition of exogenous ATP. Addition of PPi also resulted in a release of endogenous nucleotides. We suggest that PPi inhibits CO(2) fixation by entering the chloroplast in exchange for endogenous adenine nucleotides via the transporter on the inner envelope membrane. The subsequent depletion of the internal adenine nucleotide pool would result in decreased CO(2) fixation due to insufficient ATP. Addition of ATP to PPi-inhibited chloroplasts apparently results in uptake of catalytic amounts of ATP and restoration of the internal adenine nucleotide pool thus relieving the inhibition of CO(2) fixation.  相似文献   

20.
Steady-state ATP hydrolysis in the F1-ATPase of the F(O)F1 ATP synthase complex involves rotation of the central gamma subunit relative to the catalytic sites in the alpha3beta3 pseudo-hexamer. To understand the relationship between the catalytic mechanism and gamma subunit rotation, the pre-steady-state kinetics of Mg x ATP hydrolysis in the soluble F1-ATPase upon rapid filling of all three catalytic sites was determined. The experimentally accessible partial reactions leading up to the rate-limiting step and continuing through to the steady-state mode were obtained for the first time. The burst kinetics and steady-state hydrolysis for a range of Mg x ATP concentrations provide adequate constraints for a unique minimal kinetic model that can fit all the data and satisfy extensive sensitivity tests. Significantly, the fits show that the ratio of the rates of ATP hydrolysis and synthesis is close to unity even in the steady-state mode of hydrolysis. Furthermore, the rate of Pi binding in the absence of the membranous F(O) sector is insignificant; thus, productive Pi binding does not occur without the influence of a proton motive force. In addition to the minimal steps of ATP binding, reversible ATP hydrolysis/synthesis, and the release of product Pi and ADP, one additional rate-limiting step is required to fit the burst kinetics. On the basis of the testing of all possible minimal kinetic models, this step must follow hydrolysis and precede Pi release in order to explain burst kinetics. Consistent with the single molecule analysis of Yasuda et al. (Yasuda, R., Noji, H., Yoshida, M., Kinosita, K., and Itoh, H. (2001) Nature 410, 898-904), we propose that the rate-limiting step involves a partial rotation of the gamma subunit; hence, we name this step k(gamma). Moreover, the only model that is consistent with our data and many other observations in the literature suggests that reversible hydrolysis/synthesis can only occur in the active site of the beta(TP) conformer (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628).  相似文献   

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