Vanadyl as a Probe of the Function of the F1-ATPase-Mg2+ Cofactor |
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Authors: | Wayne D. Frasch |
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Affiliation: | (1) Center for the Study of Early Events in Photosynthesis, Department of Plant Biology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287-1601 |
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Abstract: | The Mg2+ dependent asymmetry of the F1-ATPase catalytic sites leads to the differences in affinity for nucleotides and is an essential component of the binding-change mechanism. Changes in metal ligands during the catalytic cycle responsible for this asymmetry were characterized by vanadyl (VIV + O)2+, a functional surrogate for Mg2+. The 51V-hyperfine parameters derived from EPR spectra of VO2+ bound to specific sites on F1 provide a direct probe of the metal ligands. Site-directed mutations of metal ligand residues cause measurable changes in the 51V-hyperfine parameters of the bound VO2+, thereby providing a means to identification. Initial binding of the metal–nucleotide to the low-affinity catalytic site conformation results in metal coordination by hydroxyl groups from the P-loop threonine and catch-loop threonine. Upon conversion to the high-affinity conformation, carboxyl groups from the Walker homology B aspartate and MF1 E197 become ligands in lieu of the hydroxyl groups. |
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Keywords: | F1-ATPase F1Fo-ATP synthase vanadyl |
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