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1.
Mancini EJ  Kainov DE  Grimes JM  Tuma R  Bamford DH  Stuart DI 《Cell》2004,118(6):743-755
Many viruses package their genome into preformed capsids using packaging motors powered by the hydrolysis of ATP. The hexameric ATPase P4 of dsRNA bacteriophage phi12, located at the vertices of the icosahedral capsid, is such a packaging motor. We have captured crystallographic structures of P4 for all the key points along the catalytic pathway, including apo, substrate analog bound, and product bound. Substrate and product binding have been observed as both binary complexes and ternary complexes with divalent cations. These structures reveal large movements of the putative RNA binding loop, which are coupled with nucleotide binding and hydrolysis, indicating how ATP hydrolysis drives RNA translocation through cooperative conformational changes. Two distinct conformations of bound nucleotide triphosphate suggest how hydrolysis is activated by RNA binding. This provides a model for chemomechanical coupling for a prototype of the large family of hexameric helicases and oligonucleotide translocating enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
Structural basis of mechanochemical coupling in a hexameric molecular motor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The P4 protein of bacteriophage phi12 is a hexameric molecular motor closely related to superfamily 4 helicases. P4 converts chemical energy from ATP hydrolysis into mechanical work, to translocate single-stranded RNA into a viral capsid. The molecular basis of mechanochemical coupling, i.e. how small approximately 1 A changes in the ATP-binding site are amplified into nanometer scale motion along the nucleic acid, is not understood at the atomic level. Here we study in atomic detail the mechanochemical coupling using structural and biochemical analyses of P4 mutants. We show that a conserved region, consisting of superfamily 4 helicase motifs H3 and H4 and loop L2, constitutes the moving lever of the motor. The lever tip encompasses an RNA-binding site that moves along the mechanical reaction coordinate. The lever is flanked by gamma-phosphate sensors (Asn-234 and Ser-252) that report the nucleotide state of neighboring subunits and control the lever position. Insertion of an arginine finger (Arg-279) into the neighboring catalytic site is concomitant with lever movement and commences ATP hydrolysis. This ensures cooperative sequential hydrolysis that is tightly coupled to mechanical motion. Given the structural conservation, the mutated residues may play similar roles in other hexameric helicases and related molecular motors.  相似文献   

3.
Many complex viruses acquire their genome by active packaging into a viral precursor particle called a procapsid. Packaging is performed by a viral portal complex, which couples ATP hydrolysis to translocation of nucleic acid into the procapsid. The packaging process has been studied for a variety of viruses, but the mechanism of the associated ATPase remains elusive. In this study, the mechanism of RNA translocation in double-stranded RNA bacteriophages is characterized using rapid kinetic analyses. The portal complex of bacteriophage 8 is a hexamer of protein P4, which exhibits nucleotide triphosphatase activity. The kinetics of ATP binding reveals a two-step process: an initial, fast, second-order association, followed by a slower, first-order phase. The slower phase exhibits a high activation energy and has been assigned to a conformational change. ATP binding becomes cooperative in the presence of RNA. Steady-state kinetics of ATP hydrolysis, which proceeds only in the presence of RNA, also exhibits cooperativity. On the other hand, ADP release is fast and RNA-independent. The steady-state rate of hydrolysis increases with the length of the RNA substrate indicating processive translocation. Raman spectroscopy reveals that RNA binds to P4 via the phosphate backbone. The ATP-induced conformational change affects the backbone of the bound RNA but leaves the protein secondary structure unchanged. This is consistent with a model in which cooperativity is induced by an RNA link between subunits of the hexamers and translocation is effected by an axial movement of the subunits relative to one another upon ATP binding.  相似文献   

4.
Mechanochemistry of transcription termination factor Rho   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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5.
Translocases of the AAA+ (ATPases Associated with various cellular Activities) family are powerful molecular machines that use the mechano‐chemical coupling of ATP hydrolysis and conformational changes to thread DNA or protein substrates through their central channel for many important biological processes. These motors comprise hexameric rings of ATPase subunits, in which highly conserved nucleotide‐binding domains form active‐site pockets near the subunit interfaces and aromatic pore‐loop residues extend into the central channel for substrate binding and mechanical pulling. Over the past 2 years, 41 cryo‐EM structures have been solved for substrate‐bound AAA+ translocases that revealed spiral‐staircase arrangements of pore‐loop residues surrounding substrate polypeptides and indicating a conserved hand‐over‐hand mechanism for translocation. The subunits' vertical positions within the spiral arrangements appear to be correlated with their nucleotide states, progressing from ATP‐bound at the top to ADP or apo states at the bottom. Studies describing multiple conformations for a particular motor illustrate the potential coupling between ATP‐hydrolysis steps and subunit movements to propel the substrate. Experiments with double‐ring, Type II AAA+ motors revealed an offset of hydrolysis steps between the two ATPase domains of individual subunits, and the upper ATPase domains lacking aromatic pore loops frequently form planar rings. This review summarizes the critical advances provided by recent studies to our structural and functional understanding of hexameric AAA+ translocases, as well as the important outstanding questions regarding the underlying mechanisms for coordinated ATP‐hydrolysis and mechano‐chemical coupling.  相似文献   

6.
Simian Virus 40 Large Tumor Antigen (LTag) is an efficient helicase motor that unwinds and translocates DNA. The DNA unwinding and translocation of LTag is powered by ATP binding and hydrolysis at the nucleotide pocket between two adjacent subunits of an LTag hexamer. Based on the set of high-resolution hexameric structures of LTag helicase in different nucleotide binding states, we simulated a conformational transition pathway of the ATP binding process using the targeted molecular dynamics method and calculated the corresponding energy profile using the linear response approximation (LRA) version of the semi-macroscopic Protein Dipoles Langevin Dipoles method (PDLD/S). The simulation results suggest a three-step process for the ATP binding from the initial interaction to the final tight binding at the nucleotide pocket, in which ATP is eventually “locked” by three pairs of charge-charge interactions across the pocket. Such a “cross-locking” ATP binding process is similar to the binding zipper model reported for the F1-ATPase hexameric motor. The simulation also shows a transition mechanism of Mg2+ coordination to form the Mg-ATP complex during ATP binding, which is accompanied by the large conformational changes of LTag. This simulation study of the ATP binding process to an LTag and the accompanying conformational changes in the context of a hexamer leads to a refined cooperative iris model that has been proposed previously.  相似文献   

7.
Genomes of complex viruses have been demonstrated, in many cases, to be packaged into preformed empty capsids (procapsids). This reaction is performed by molecular motors translocating nucleic acid against the concentration gradient at the expense of NTP hydrolysis. At present, the molecular mechanisms of packaging remain elusive due to the complex nature of packaging motors. In the case of the double-stranded RNA bacteriophage phi 6 from the Cystoviridae family, packaging of single-stranded genomic precursors requires a hexameric NTPase, P4. In the present study, the purified P4 proteins from two other cystoviruses, phi 8 and phi 13, were characterized and compared with phi 6 P4. All three proteins are hexameric, single-stranded RNA-stimulated NTPases with alpha/beta folds. Using a direct motor assay, we found that phi 8 and phi 13 P4 hexamers translocate 5' to 3' along ssRNA, whereas the analogous activity of phi 6 P4 requires association with the procapsid. This difference is explained by the intrinsically high affinity of phi 8 and phi 13 P4s for nucleic acids. The unidirectional translocation results in RNA helicase activity. Thus, P4 proteins of Cystoviridae exhibit extensive similarity to hexameric helicases and are simple models for studying viral packaging motor mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
The antibiotic bicyclomycin inhibits rho-dependent termination processes by interfering with RNA translocation by preventing RNA binding at the translocation site or by uncoupling the translocation process from ATP hydrolysis. Previous studies have shown that bicyclomycin binds near the ATP hydrolysis pocket on rho. The hexameric structure of rho indicates that it is in a class of enzymes with strong sequence similarity to F(1)-ATP synthase. The bicyclomycin derivative 5a-formylbicyclomycin, an inhibitor comparable to bicyclomycin, was previously shown to form a stable imine with rho and when reduced to the amine with NaBH(4) to singly label five of the six rho subunits. Lysine-336 was identified by mass spectrometric analysis of trypsin-digested fragments as the site of 5a-formylbicyclomycin adduction. A model of rho was made by threading the rho sequence on the known crystal structure of the alpha and beta subunits of F(1)-ATP synthase. The model, along with information concerning the extent and site of 5a-formylbicyclomycin adduction, indicates an overall C6 symmetry for rho subunit organization. We propose that the sequence similarity between rho and F(1)-ATP synthase extends to a similar quaternary structure and an equivalent enzyme mechanism. The proposed mechanism of RNA translocation coupled with ATP hydrolysis changes the overall symmetry of rho from C6 to C6/C3.  相似文献   

9.
During RuvAB-mediated Holliday-junction migration two opposite arms of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) are driven to translocate unidirectional by two respective ring-like hexameric RuvB proteins. However, how the RuvB protein, powered by ATP hydrolysis, drives unidirectional translocation of dsDNA is not clear. Here a model is presented for this mechanochemical-coupling mechanism. In the model, the unidirectional translocation is resulted from both the ATP hydrolysis-induced rotation (power stroke) of the RuvB subunits and the passage of the strong DNA binding from the previous to next RuvB subunits during the sequential ATPase activities around the ring. Using the model, the relationship between the power-stroke size, the step size of DNA translocation and the ratio of the rotational rate of DNA over that of RuvB relative to RuvA is predicted.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPase (V-ATPase or V-type ATPase) is a multisubunit complex comprised of a water-soluble V(1) complex, responsible for ATP hydrolysis, and a membrane-embedded V(o) complex, responsible for proton translocation. The V(1) complex of Thermus thermophilus V-ATPase has the subunit composition of A(3)B(3)DF, in which the A and B subunits form a hexameric ring structure. A central stalk composed of the D and F subunits penetrates the ring. In this study, we investigated the pathway for assembly of the V(1) complex by reconstituting the V(1) complex from the monomeric A and B subunits and DF subcomplex in vitro. Assembly of these components into the V(1) complex required binding of ATP to the A subunit, although hydrolysis of ATP is not necessary. In the absence of the DF subcomplex, the A and B monomers assembled into A(1)B(1) and A(3)B(3) subcomplexes in an ATP binding-dependent manner, suggesting that ATP binding-dependent interaction between the A and B subunits is a crucial step of assembly into V(1) complex. Kinetic analysis of assembly of the A and B monomers into the A(1)B(1) heterodimer using fluorescence resonance energy transfer indicated that the A subunit binds ATP prior to binding the B subunit. Kinetics of binding of a fluorescent ADP analog, N-methylanthraniloyl ADP (mant-ADP), to the monomeric A subunit also supported the rapid nucleotide binding to the A subunit.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Spastin is a hexameric ring AAA ATPase that severs microtubules. To see whether the ring complex funnels the energy of multiple ATP hydrolysis events to the site of mechanical action, we investigate here the cooperativity of spastin. Several lines of evidence indicate that interactions among two subunits dominate the cooperative behavior: (i) the ATPase activity shows a sigmoidal dependence on the ATP concentration; (ii) ATPγS displays a mixed-inhibition behavior for normal ATP turnover; and (iii) inactive mutant subunits inhibit the activity of spastin in a hyperbolic dependence, characteristic for two interacting species. A quantitative model based on neighbor interactions fits mutant titration experiments well, suggesting that each subunit is mainly influenced by one of its neighbors. These observations are relevant for patients suffering from SPG4-type hereditary spastic paraplegia and explain why single amino acid exchanges lead to a dominant negative phenotype. In severing assays, wild type spastin is even more sensitive toward the presence of inactive mutants than in enzymatic assays, suggesting a weak coupling of ATPase and severing activity.  相似文献   

14.
ATP-mediated conformational changes in the RecA filament   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The crystal structure of the E. coli RecA protein was solved more than 10 years ago, but it has provided limited insight into the mechanism of homologous genetic recombination. Using electron microscopy, we have reconstructed five different states of RecA-DNA filaments. The C-terminal lobe of the RecA protein is modulated by the state of the distantly bound nucleotide, and this allosteric coupling can explain how mutations and truncations of this C-terminal lobe enhance RecA's activity. A model generated from these reconstructions shows that the nucleotide binding core is substantially rotated from its position in the RecA crystal filament, resulting in ATP binding between subunits. This simple rotation can explain the large cooperativity in ATP hydrolysis observed for RecA-DNA filaments.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
18.
The conformational fluctuation of enzymes has a crucial role in reaction acceleration. However, the contribution to catalysis enhancement of individual substates with conformations far from the average conformation remains unclear. We studied the catalytic power of the rotary molecular motor F(1)-ATPase from thermophilic Bacillus PS3 as it was stalled in transient conformations far from a stable pausing angle. The rate constants of ATP binding and hydrolysis were determined as functions of the rotary angle. Both rates exponentially increase with rotation, revealing the molecular basis of positive cooperativity among three catalytic sites: elementary reaction steps are accelerated via the mechanical rotation driven by other reactions on neighboring catalytic sites. The rate enhancement induced by ATP binding upon rotation was greater than that brought about by hydrolysis, suggesting that the ATP binding step contributes more to torque generation than does the hydrolysis step. Additionally, 9% of the ATP-driven rotary step was supported by thermal diffusion, suggesting that acceleration of the ATP docking process occurs via thermally agitated conformational fluctuations.  相似文献   

19.
DnaB is the primary replicative helicase in Escherichia coli and the hexameric DnaB ring has previously been shown to exist in two states in the presence of nucleotides. In one, all subunits are equivalent, while in the other, there are two different subunit conformations resulting in a trimer of dimers. Under all conditions that we have used for electron microscopy, including the absence of nucleotide, some rings exist as trimers of dimers, showing that the symmetry of the DnaB hexamer can be broken prior to nucleotide binding. Three-dimensional reconstructions reveal that the N-terminal domain of DnaB makes two very different contacts with neighboring subunits in the trimer of dimers, but does not form a predicted dimer with a neighboring N-terminal domain. Within the trimer of dimers, the helicase domain exists in two alternate conformations, each of which can form symmetrical hexamers depending upon the nucleotide cofactor used. These results provide new information about the modular architecture and domain dynamics of helicases, and suggest, by comparison with the hexameric bacteriophage T7 gp4 and SV40 large T-antigen helicases, that a great structural and mechanistic diversity may exist among the hexameric helicases.  相似文献   

20.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protein has two enzymatic activities of helicase and protease that are essential for viral replication. The helicase separates the strands of DNA and RNA duplexes using the energy from ATP hydrolysis. To understand how ATP hydrolysis is coupled to helicase movement, we measured the single turnover helicase translocation-dissociation kinetics and the pre-steady-state Pi release kinetics on single-stranded RNA and DNA substrates of different lengths. The parameters of stepping were determined from global fitting of the two types of kinetic measurements into a computational model that describes translocation as a sequence of coupled hydrolysis-stepping reactions. Our results show that the HCV helicase moves with a faster rate on single stranded RNA than on DNA. The HCV helicase steps on the RNA or DNA one nucleotide at a time, and due to imperfect coupling, not every ATP hydrolysis event produces a successful step. Comparison of the helicase domain (NS3h) with the protease-helicase (NS3-4A) shows that the most significant contribution of the protease domain is to improve the translocation stepping efficiency of the helicase. Whereas for NS3h, only 20% of the hydrolysis events result in translocation, the coupling for NS3-4A is near-perfect 93%. The presence of the protease domain also significantly reduces the stepping rate, but it doubles the processivity. These effects of the protease domain on the helicase can be explained by an improved allosteric cross-talk between the ATP- and nucleic acid-binding sites achieved by the overall stabilization of the helicase domain structure.  相似文献   

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