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1.
Miller A  Wang L  Kendall DA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(16):5325-5332
In Escherichia coli, the formation of SecA-SecB complexes has a direct effect on SecA ATPase activity. The mechanism of this interaction was evaluated and defined using controlled trypsinolysis, equilibrium dialysis at low temperature, and kinetic analyses of the SecA ATPase reaction. The proteolysis data indicate that SecB and the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue AMP-P-C-P induce similar conformational changes in SecA which result in a more open or extended structure that is suggestive of the ATP-bound form. The effect is synergistic and concentration-dependent, and requires the occupation of both the high- and low-affinity nucleotide binding sites for maximum effect. The equilibrium dialysis experiments and kinetic data support the observation that the SecB-enhanced SecA ATPase activity is the result of an increased rate of ATP hydrolysis rather than an increase in the affinity of ATP for SecA and that the high-affinity nucleotide binding site is conformationally regulated by SecB. It appears that SecB may function as an intermolecular regulator of ATP hydrolysis by promoting the ATP-bound state of SecA. The inhibition of SecA ATPase activity by sodium azide in the presence of IMVs and a functional signal peptide further indicates that SecB promotes the ATP-bound form of SecA.  相似文献   

2.
Vineyard D  Zhang X  Lee I 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11432-11443
Lon is an oligomeric serine protease whose proteolytic activity is mediated by ATP hydrolysis. Although each monomeric subunit has an identical sequence, Lon contains two types of ATPase sites that hydrolyze ATP at drastically different rates. The catalytic low-affinity sites display pre-steady-state burst kinetics and hydrolyze ATP prior to peptide cleavage. The high-affinity sites are able to hydrolyze ATP at a very slow rate. By utilizing the differing Kd's, the high-affinity site can be blocked with unlabeled nucleotide while the activity at the low-affinity site is monitored. Little kinetic data are available that describe microscopic events along the reaction pathway of Lon. In this study we utilize MANT-ATP, a fluorescent analogue of ATP, to monitor the rate constants for binding of ATP as well as the release of ADP from Escherichia coli Lon protease. All of the adenine nucleotides tested bound to Lon on the order of 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), and the previously proposed conformational change associated with nucleotide binding was also detected. On the basis of the data obtained in this study we propose that the rate of ADP release is slightly different for the two ATPase sites. As the model peptide substrate [S2; YRGITCSGRQK(Bz)] [Thomas-Wohlever, J., and Lee, I. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 9418-9425] or the protein substrate casein affects only the steady-state ATPase activity of the low-affinity sites, we propose that Lon adopts a different form after its first turnover as an ATP-dependent protease. Based on the obtained rate constants, a revised kinetic model is presented for ATPase activity in Lon protease in both the absence and presence of the model peptide substrate (S2).  相似文献   

3.
Cochran JC  Gilbert SP 《Biochemistry》2005,44(50):16633-16648
The ATPase mechanism of kinesin superfamily members in the absence of microtubules remains largely uncharacterized. We have adopted a strategy to purify monomeric human Eg5 (HsKSP/Kinesin-5) in the nucleotide-free state (apoEg5) in order to perform a detailed transient state kinetic analysis. We have used steady-state and presteady-state kinetics to define the minimal ATPase mechanism for apoEg5 in the absence and presence of the Eg5-specific inhibitor, monastrol. ATP and ADP binding both occur via a two-step process with the isomerization of the collision complex limiting each forward reaction. ATP hydrolysis and phosphate product release are rapid steps in the mechanism, and the observed rate of these steps is limited by the relatively slow isomerization of the Eg5-ATP collision complex. A conformational change coupled to ADP release is the rate-limiting step in the pathway. We propose that the microtubule amplifies and accelerates the structural transitions needed to form the ATP hydrolysis competent state and for rapid ADP release, thus stimulating ATP turnover and increasing enzymatic efficiency. Monastrol appears to bind weakly to the Eg5-ATP collision complex, but after tight ATP binding, the affinity for monastrol increases, thus inhibiting the conformational change required for ADP product release. Taken together, we hypothesize that loop L5 of Eg5 undergoes an "open" to "closed" structural transition that correlates with the rearrangements of the switch-1 and switch-2 regions at the active site during the ATPase cycle.  相似文献   

4.
Translocation of precursor proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane in bacteria is mediated by a multi-subunit protein complex termed translocase, which consists of the integral membrane heterotrimer SecYEG and the peripheral homodimeric ATPase SecA. Preproteins are bound by the cytosolic molecular chaperone SecB and targeted in a complex with SecA to the translocation site at the cytoplasmic membrane. This interaction with SecYEG allows the SecA/preprotein complex to insert into the membrane by binding of ATP to the high affinity nucleotide binding site of SecA. At that stage, presumably recognition and proofreading of the signal sequence occurs. Hydrolysis of ATP causes the release of the preprotein in the translocation channel and drives the withdrawal of SecA from the membrane-integrated state. Hydrolysis of ATP at the low-affinity nucleotide binding site of SecA converts the protein into a compact conformational state and releases it from the membrane. In the absence of the proton motive force, SecA is able to complete the translocation stepwise by multiple nucleotide modulated cycles. Received: 4 August 1995 / Accepted: 9 October 1995  相似文献   

5.
Three types of assays were used to characterize adenine nucleotide binding sites on the Ca2+, Mg2+-activated ATPase of normal Escherichia coli and its unc A 401 and unc D 412 mutants. ADP was bound mainly at a single site in normal and mutant ATPase. In the absence of divalent cations ATP was bound at a single high-affinity and three low-affinity sites in normal and unc D ATPases. The 2′,3′-dialdehyde (oADP) obtained by periodate oxidation of ADP reacted with both low- and high-affinity sites whereas oATP was bound primarily at a low-affinity site. Two types of adenine nucleotide binding sites, a high-affinity site reacting with ATP and ADP and a low-affinity site for ATP, were detected by the effects of these nucleotides on the fluorescence of the aurovertin D-ATPase complex. This high-affinity site(s) was present in normal and mutant ATPases. However, the fluorescence response at both high- and low-affinity sites was modified in the unc D ATPase as a consequence of the abnormal β subunit in this enzyme. Normal fluorescence responses were not induced by the binding of oADP or oATP to the ATPases. ATP was bound at a single site on isolated α subunits of the enzyme. Since this site was not detected in the unc A ATPase, it is unlikely to be the high-affinity site detected in the intact enzyme or the binding site for the endogenous tightly bound adenine nucleotides found in the purified ATPase. It is more probable that the site detected on the isolated α subunit from the normal enzyme is that which binds oADP since this site was absent in the unc A ATPase. Pretreatment of the normal ATPase with either N, N′-dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide (DCCD) or with 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan (NbfCl), reagents which inhibit ATPase activity by reacting with a β subunit, affected binding of oADP to α subunit(s) but had less effect with oATP. Inhibition of oADP binding could be due to conformational changes induced in the α subunit by the reaction of DCCD and NbfCl with a β subunit, or to steric reasons. If the latter hypothesis is correct, the active site of the ATPase would be at the interface between α and β subunits of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
The Mg2+-induced low-affinity nucleotide binding by (Na+ + K+)-ATPase has been further investigated. Both heat treatment (50-65 degrees C) and treatment with N-ethylmaleimide reduce the binding capacity irreversibly without altering the Kd value. The rate constant of inactivation is about one-third of that for the high-affinity site and for the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity. Thermodynamic parameters (delta H degree and delta S degree) for the apparent affinity in the ATPase reaction (Km ATP) and for the true affinity in the binding of AdoPP[NH]P (Kd and Ki) differ greatly in sign and magnitude, indicating that one or more reaction steps following binding significantly contribute to the Km value, which thus is smaller than the Kd value. Ouabain does not affect the capacity of low-affinity nucleotide binding, but only increases the Kd value to an extent depending on the nucleotide used. GTP and CTP appear to be most sensitive, ATP and ADP intermediately sensitive and AdoPP[NH]P and AMP least sensitive to ouabain. Ouabain reduces the high-affinity nucleotide binding capacity without affecting the Kd value. The nucleotide specificity of the low-affinity binding site is the same for binding (competition with AdoPP[NH]P) and for the ATPase activity (competition with ATP): AdoPP[NH]P greater than ATP greater than ADP greater than AMP. The low-affinity nucleotide binding capacity is preserved in the ouabain-stabilized phosphorylated state, and the Kd value is not increased more than by ouabain alone. It is inferred that the low-affinity site is located on the enzyme, more specifically its alpha-subunit, and not on the surrounding phospholipids. It is situated outside the phosphorylation centre. The possible functional role of the low-affinity binding is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
SecA protein, the ATPase promoting translocation of proteins across the Escherichia coli inner membrane, contains two ATP-binding domains that differ greatly in their affinity for bound nucleotide. In order to define more precisely the location of the high-affinity nucleotide-binding site, oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was used to introduce cysteine residues into the SecA sequence, and a cysteine-specific cleavage reagent was employed to generate defined peptides of SecA protein after photocross-linking with [α-32P]-ATP. This analysis revealed that the nucleotide was cross-linked between amino acid residues 75 and 97 of SecA protein. The biochemical function of the high affinity ATP-binding domain was explored by subcellular fractionation studies which demonstrated that SecA proteins defective in this region were found almost exclusively in their integral membrane form, while SecA proteins with defects in the low-affinity ATP-domain showed a normal distribution of cytosolic, peripheral and integral membrane forms. Interestingly, the SecA51(Ts) protein that has a Leu to Pro substitution at amino acid residue 43 bound ATP with high affinity, but its fractionation pattern and translocation ATPase activity were similar to those of proteins with defects in the high-affinity ATP-binding site. These results delimit more precisely the high-affinity ATP-binding domain of SecA, indicate the importance of the early amino-terminal region of SecA protein in the functioning of this domain, and demonstrate the role of this domain in regulating penetration of SecA protein into the inner membrane. Our results lead to a simple model for the regulation of a cycle of SecA insertion into, and de-insertion from, the inner membrane by the activity of the high-affinity ATP-binding domain.  相似文献   

8.
The glycosidic bond torsion angles and the conformations of the ribose of Mg2+ATP, Mg2+ADP and Mg2+AdoPP[NH]P (magnesium adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate) bound to Ca2+ATPase, both native and modified with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), in intact sarcoplasmic reticulum have been determined by the measurement of proton-proton transferred nuclear Overhauser enhancements by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. This method shows clearly the existence of a low-affinity ATP binding site after modification of the high-affinity site with FITC. For all three nucleotides bound to both the high-affinity (catalytic) site and the low-affinity site, we find that the conformation about the glycosidic bond is anti, the conformation of the ribose 3'-endo of the N type and the conformation about the ribose C4'-C5' bond either gauche-trans or trans-gauche. The values for the glycosidic bond torsion angles chi (O4'-C1'-N9-C4) for Mg2+ATP, Mg2+ADP and Mg2+AdoPP[NH]P bound to the low-affinity site of FITC-modified Ca2+ATPase are approximately equal to 270 degrees, approximately equal to 260 degrees and approximately equal to 240 degrees respectively. In the case of the nucleotides bound to the high-affinity (catalytic) site of native Ca2+ATPase, chi lies in the range 240-280 degrees.  相似文献   

9.
SecA initiates protein translocation by interacting with ATP, preprotein, and the SecYEG membrane components. Under such conditions, it undergoes a conformational change characterized as membrane insertion, which is then followed by hydrolysis of ATP, enabling the release of the preprotein and deinsertion of SecA itself for the next cycle of reactions. Without ongoing translocation, the ATPase activity of SecA is kept very low. Previously, it was shown that the C-terminal 34-kDa domain of SecA interacts with the N-terminal 68-kDa ATPase domain to down-regulate the ATPase. Here, we show, using a deregulated SecA mutant, that the intrinsic ATPase activity is subject to dual inhibitory mechanisms. Thus, the proposed second ATP-binding domain down-regulates the ATPase activity executed by the primary ATPase domain. This regulation, within the N-terminal ATPase domain, operates independently of the C-terminal domain-mediated regulation. The absence of both the mechanisms resulted in a 50-fold elevation of translocation-uncoupled ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

10.
RecA mediated homologous recombination requires cooperative ATP binding and hydrolysis to assume and maintain an active, extended DNA-protein (nucleoprotein) filament. Human RAD51 protein (hRAD51) lacks the magnitude of ATP-induced cooperativity and catalytic efficiency displayed by RecA. Here, we examined hRAD51 binding and ATPase inhibition pattern by ADP and ATP/adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (ATPgammaS). hRAD51 fully saturates with ATP/ATPgammaS regardless of DNA cofactor (K(D) approximately 5 microm; 1 ATP/1 hRAD51). The binding of ADP to hRAD51 appeared bimodal. The first mode was identical to ATP/ATPgammaS binding (K(app1) approximately 3 microm; 1 ADP/1 hRAD51), while a second mode occurred at elevated ADP concentrations (K(app2) > or = 125 microm; >1 ADP/1 hRAD51). We could detect ADP --> ATP exchange in the high affinity ADP binding mode (K(app1)) but not the low affinity binding mode (K(app2)). At low ATP concentrations (<0.3 mm), ADP and ATPgammaS competitively inhibit the hRAD51 ATPase (K(m)((app)) > K(m)). However, at high ATP (>0.3 mm), the hRAD51 ATPase was stimulated by concentrations of ATPgammaS that were 20-fold above the K(D). Ammonium sulfate plus spermidine decreased the affinity of hRAD51 for ADP substantially ( approximately 10-fold) and ATP modestly ( approximately 3-fold). Our results suggest that ATP binding is not rate-limiting but that the inability to sustain an active nucleoprotein filament probably restricts the hRAD51 ATPase.  相似文献   

11.
Shimizu T  Thorn KS  Ruby A  Vale RD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(18):5265-5273
Conventional kinesin is a microtubule-based motor protein that is an important model system for understanding mechanochemical transduction. To identify regions of the kinesin protein that participate in microtubule binding and force production, Woehlke et al. [(1997) Cell 90, 207-216] generated 35 alanine mutations in solvent-exposed residues. Here, we have performed presteady-state kinetic and single molecule motility analyses on three of these mutants [Y138A, loop 11 triple (L248A/D249A/E250A), and E311A] that exhibited a similar approximately 3-fold reduction in both microtubule gliding velocity and microtubule-stimulated ATPase activity. All mutants showed normal second-order ATP binding kinetics, indicating correct folding of the active site. The Y138A and loop 11 triple mutants were defective both in nucleotide hydrolysis and in microtubule-stimulated ADP release rates, the latter suggesting a defect in allosteric communication between the microtubule and the active site. A single molecule fluorescence assay further revealed that the loop 11 mutant is defective in initiating processive motion, suggesting that this loop is important for the initial contact between kinesin and the microtubule. Y138A, on the other hand, can bind to the microtubule normally but cannot move processively. For E311A, neither the rate of nucleotide hydrolysis nor ADP release could account for its slower ATPase and gliding velocity, which suggests that either phosphate release or a conformational transition is rate-limiting in this mutant. The single molecule assay showed that E311A has a reduced velocity of movement, but is not defective in processivity. Thus, while these mutants behave similarly in solution ATPase and multiple motor gliding assays, kinetic and single molecule analyses reveal defects in distinct processes in kinesin's mechanochemical cycle.  相似文献   

12.
Lon is an ATP-dependent serine protease that degrades damaged and certain regulatory proteins in vivo. Lon exists as a homo-oligomer and represents one of the simplest ATP-dependent proteases because both the protease and ATPase domains are located within each monomeric subunit. Previous pre-steady-state kinetic studies revealed functional nonequivalency in the ATPase activity of the enzyme [Vineyard, D., et al. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 1671-1682]. Both a high- and low-affinity ATPase site has been previously reported for Lon [Menon, A. S., and Goldberg, A. L. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14921-14928]. Because of the differing affinities for ATP, we were able to monitor the activities of the sites separately and determine that they were noninteracting. The high-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP very slowly (k(obs) = 0.019 +/- 0.002 s(-1)), while the low-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP quickly at a rate of 17.2 +/- 0.09 s(-1), which is comparable to the previously observed burst rate. Although the high-affinity sites hydrolyze ATP slowly, they support multiple rounds of peptide hydrolysis, indicating that ATP and peptide hydrolysis are not stoichiometrically linked. However, ATP binding and hydrolysis at both the high- and low-affinity sites are necessary for optimal peptide cleavage and the stabilization of the conformational change associated with nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

13.
Lewis JH  Lin T  Hokanson DE  Ostap EM 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11589-11597
Myo1b is a widely expressed myosin-I isoform that concentrates on endosomal and ruffling membranes and is thought to play roles in membrane trafficking and dynamics. It is one of the best characterized myosin-I isoforms and appears to have unique biochemical properties tuned for tension sensing or tension maintenance. We determined the key biochemical rate constants that define the actomyo1b ATPase cycle at 37 degrees C and measured the temperature dependence of ATP binding, ADP release, and the transition from a nucleotide-inaccessible state to a nucleotide-accessible state (k(alpha)). The rate of ATP binding is highly temperature sensitive, with an Arrhenius activation energy 2-3-fold greater than other characterized myosins (e.g., myosin-II and myosin-V). ATP hydrolysis is fast, and phosphate release is slow and rate limiting with an actin dependence that is nearly identical to the steady-state ATPase parameters (Vmax and K(ATPase)). ADP release is not as temperature dependent as ATP binding. The rates and temperature dependence of ADP release are similar to k(alpha) suggesting that a similar structural change is responsible for both transitions. We calculate a duty ratio of 0.08 based on the biochemical kinetics. However, this duty ratio is likely to be highly sensitive to strain.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the refolding kinetics of alpha-lactalbumin in the presence of wild-type GroEL and its ATPase-deficient mutant D398A at various concentrations of nucleotides (ATP and ADP). We evaluated the apparent binding constant between GroEL and the alpha-lactalbumin refolding intermediate quantitatively by numerical simulation analysis of the alpha-lactalbumin refolding curves in the presence and absence of GroEL. The binding constant showed a co-operative decrease with an increase in ATP concentration, whereas the binding constant decreased in a non-co-operative manner with respect to ADP concentration. For the D398A mutant, the ATP-induced decrease in affinity occurred much faster than the steady-state ATP hydrolysis by this mutant, suggesting that ATP binding to GroEL rather than ATP hydrolysis, was responsible for the co-operative decrease in the affinity for the target protein. We thus analyzed the nucleotide-concentration dependence of affinity of GroEL for the target protein using an allosteric Monod-Wyman-Changeux model in which GroEL underwent an ATP-induced co-operative conformational transition between the high-affinity and low-affinity states of the target protein. The transition midpoint of the ATP-induced transition of GroEL has been found to be around 30 microM, in good agreement with the midpoint evaluated in other structural studies of GroEL. The results show that the observed difference between ATP and ADP-induced transitions of GroEL are brought about by a small difference in an allosteric parameter (the ratio of the nucleotide affinities of GroEL in the high-affinity and the low-affinity states), i.e. 4.1 for ATP and 2.6 for ADP.  相似文献   

15.
C Martin  C F Higgins  R Callaghan 《Biochemistry》2001,40(51):15733-15742
Conceptually one may envisage that substrate binding sites on the ABC transporter P-gp cycle between high- and low-affinity conformations in response to signals arising from nucleotide hydrolysis to effect active transport. A radioligand binding assay was used to characterize the interaction of [3H]vinblastine with P-gp and determine how drug binding site parameters are altered during a catalytic cycle of P-gp. In the absence of nucleotide, we show that [3H]vinblastine interacts with a single class of binding site with high affinity (K(d) = 80 +/- 18 nM). In the presence of the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue AMP-PNP, the drug binding site was in a low-affinity conformation, manifest by a 9-fold increase in K(d) (K(d) = 731 +/- 20 nM). There was no alteration in the binding capacity, reflecting a complete shift in the high-affinity site to a low-affinity form. The posthydrolytic (Mg-ADP-V(i) bound) form of P-gp also exhibited low-affinity substrate binding (K(d) = 446 +/- 57 nM). Restoration of the high-affinity drug binding site conformation (K(d) = 131 +/- 32 nM) did not occur until release of phosphate from the posthydrolysis P-gp-Mg-ADP-P(i). complex. Our results suggest that alteration of the affinity of the vinblastine binding site involves only one nucleotide binding domain per transport cycle. The binding of ATP provides the signal to instigate this change, while release of phosphate post-ATP hydrolysis returns the transporter to its original state to complete the cycle.  相似文献   

16.
The epsilon subunit of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase is a tightly bound but dissociable partial inhibitor of ATPase activity. The effects of epsilon on the enzyme were investigated by comparing the ATPase activity and aurovertin binding properties of the epsilon-depleted F1-ATPase and the epsilon-replete complex. Kinetic data of multisite ATP hydrolysis were analyzed to give the best fit for one, two, or three kinetic components. Each form of F1-ATPase contained a high-affinity component, with a Km near 20 microM and a velocity of approximately 1 unit/mg. Each also exhibited a component with a Km in the range of 0.2 mM. The velocity of this component was 25 units/mg for epsilon-depleted ATPase but only 4 units/mg for epsilon-replete enzyme. The epsilon-depleted enzyme also contained a very low affinity component not present in the epsilon-replete enzyme. In unisite hydrolysis studies, epsilon had no effect on the equilibrium between substrate ATP and product ADP.P1 at the active site but reduced the rate of product release 15-fold. These results suggest that epsilon subunit slows a conformational change that is required to reduce the affinity at the active site, allowing dissociation of product. It is suggested that inhibition of multisite hydrolysis by epsilon is also due to a reduced rate of product release. epsilon-depleted F1-ATPase showed little of no modulation of aurovertin fluorescence by added ADP and ATP. Aurovertin fluorescence titrations in buffer containing ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) revealed that epsilon-depleted enzyme had high affinity for aurovertin (Kd less than 0.1 microM) regardless of the presence of nucleotides.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Myosin Va becomes a low duty ratio motor in the inhibited form   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Vertebrate myosin Va is a typical processive motor with high duty ratio. Recent studies have revealed that the actin-activated ATPase activity of the full-length myosin Va (M5aFull) is inhibited at a low [Ca(2+)], which is due to the formation of a folded conformation of M5aFull. To clarify the underlying inhibitory mechanism, we analyzed the actin-activated ATP hydrolysis mechanism of the M5aFull at the inhibited and the activated states, respectively. Marked differences were found in the hydrolysis, P(i) release, and ADP release steps between the activated and the inhibited states. The kinetic constants of these steps of the activated state were similar to those of the unregulated S1 construct, in which the rate-limiting step was the ADP release step. On the other hand, the P(i) release rate from acto-M5aFull was decreased in EGTA by >1,000-fold, which makes this step the rate-limiting step for the actin-activated ATP hydrolysis cycle of M5aFull. The ADP off rate from acto-M5aFull was decreased by approximately 10-fold, and the equilibrium between the prehydrolysis state and the post hydrolysis state was shifted toward the former state in the inhibited state of M5aFull. Because of these changes, M5aFull spends a majority of the ATP hydrolysis cycling time in the weak actin binding state. The present results indicate that M5aFull molecules at a low [Ca(2+)] is inhibited as a cargo transporter not only due to the decrease in the cross-bridge cycling rate but also due to the decrease in the duty ratio thus being dissociated from actin.  相似文献   

18.
SecA ATPase is critical for protein translocation across the Escherichia coli inner membrane. To understand this activity further, the high affinity nucleotide binding activity of SecA was characterized. We found that at 4 degrees C SecA homodimer binds one ADP molecule with high affinity. This nucleotide binding activity was conformationally regulated by temperature: at low temperature SecA affinity for ADP was high with a slow exchange rate, whereas at high temperature the converse was true. Azi- and PrlD-SecA proteins that confer azide-resistant and signal sequence suppressor phenotypes were found to have reduced affinity for ADP and accelerated exchange rates compared with wild type SecA. Consistent with this observation, fluorescence and proteolysis studies indicated that these proteins had a conformationally relaxed state at a reduced temperature compared with SecA. The level of Azi- and PrlD-SecA protein was also elevated in inverted membrane vesicles where it displayed higher membrane ATPase activity. These results provide the first direct evidence for conformational regulation of the SecA-dependent nucleotide cycle, its alteration in azi and prlD mutants, and its relevance to in vivo protein export.  相似文献   

19.
The helicase of hepatitis C virus (HCV) unwinds nucleic acid using the energy of ATP hydrolysis. The ATPase cycle is believed to induce protein conformational changes to drive helicase translocation along the length of the nucleic acid. We have investigated the energetics of nucleic acid binding by HCV helicase to understand how the nucleotide ligation state of the helicase dictates the conformation of its nucleic acid binding site. Because most of the nucleotide ligation states of the helicase are transient due to rapid ATP hydrolysis, several compounds were analyzed to find an efficient unhydrolyzable ATP analog. We found that the beta-gamma methylene/amine analogs of ATP, ATPgammaS, or [AlF4]ADP were not effective in inhibiting the ATPase activity of HCV helicase. On the other hand, [BeF3]ADP was found to be a potent inhibitor of the ATPase activity, and it binds tightly to HCV helicase with a 1:1 stoichiometry. Equilibrium binding studies showed that HCV helicase binds single-stranded nucleic acid with a high affinity in the absence of ATP or in the presence of ADP. Upon binding to the ATP analog, a 100-fold reduction in affinity for ssDNA was observed. The reduction in affinity was also observed in duplex DNA with 3' single-stranded tail and in RNA but not in duplex DNA. The results of this study indicate that the nucleic acid binding site of HCV helicase is allosterically modulated by the ATPase reaction. The binding energy of ATP is used to bring HCV helicase out of a tightly bound state to facilitate translocation, whereas ATP hydrolysis and product release steps promote tight rebinding of the helicase to the nucleic acid. On the basis of these results we propose a Brownian motor model for unidirectional translocation of HCV helicase along the nucleic acid length.  相似文献   

20.
Actin contains a single high-affinity cation-binding site, for which Ca2+ and Mg2+ can compete, and multiple low-affinity cation-binding sites, which can bind Ca2+, Mg2+, or K+. Binding of cations to the low-affinity sites causes polymerization of monomeric actin with either Ca2+ or Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. A rapid conformational change occurs upon binding of cations to the low-affinity sites (G----G) which is apparently associated with the initiation of polymerization. A much slower conformational change (G----G', or G----G' if the low-affinity sites are also occupied) follows the replacement of Ca2+ by Mg2+ at the high-affinity site. This slow conformational change is reflected in a 13% increase in the fluorescence of G-actin labeled with the fluorophore 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzene-2-oxadiazole (NBD-labeled actin). The rate of the ATP hydrolysis that accompanies elongation is slower with Ca-G-actin than with Mg-G'-actin (i.e. with Ca2+ rather than Mg2+ at the high-affinity site) although their rates of elongation are similar. The slow ATP hydrolysis on Ca-F-actin causes a lag in the increase in fluorescence associated with the elongation of actin labeled with the fluorophore N-pyrene iodoacetamide (pyrenyl-labeled actin), even though there is no lag in the elongation rate, because pyrenyl-labeled ATP-F-actin subunits have a lower fluorescence intensity than pyrenyl-labeled ADP-F-actin subunits. The effects of the cation bound to the high-affinity binding site must, therefore, be considered in quantitatively analyzing the kinetics of polymerization of NBD-labeled actin and pyrenyl-labeled actin. Although their elongation rates are not very different, the rate of nucleation is much slower for Ca-G-actin than for Mg-G'-actin, probably because of the slower rate of ATP hydrolysis when Ca2+ is bound to the high-affinity site.  相似文献   

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