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1.
The catalytic and noncatalytic sites of the chloroplast coupling factor (CF1) were selectively modified by incubation with the dialdehyde derivative of the fluorescent adenosine diphosphate analogue 1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine diphosphate. The modified CF1 was reconstituted with EDTA-treated chloroplast thylakoid membranes. The influence of light-induced transmembrane proton gradient and of phosphate ions on the fluorescence of 1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine diphosphate covalently bound to catalytic sites of reconstituted CF1 (ATP-synthase) was studied. Upon illumination of thylakoid membranes with saturating white light, the quenching of fluorescence of covalently bound 1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine diphosphate was observed. The quenching was reversed by the addition of inorganic phosphate to the reaction mixture in the dark. Repeated illumination induced the quenching once again: however, the addition of phosphate ions did not affect the fluorescence intensity now. When 1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine diphosphate was covalently bound to noncatalytic sites of ATP-synthase, no similar fluorescent changes were observed. The interrelation of the observed changes of 1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine diphosphate fluorescence and the mechanism of energy-dependent changes in the structure of the catalytic site of ATP-synthase is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Nowak KF  Tabidze V  McCarty RE 《Biochemistry》2002,41(51):15130-15134
The epsilon subunit of the ATP synthases from chloroplasts and Escherichia coli regulates the activity of the enzyme and is required for ATP synthesis. The epsilon subunit is not required for the binding of the catalytic portion of the chloroplast ATP synthase (CF1) to the membrane-embedded part (CFo). Thylakoid membranes reconstituted with CF1 lacking its epsilon subunit (CF1-epsilon) have high ATPase activity and no ATP synthesis activity, at least in part because the membranes are very leaky to protons. Either native or recombinant epsilon subunit inhibits ATPase activity and restores low proton permeability and ATP synthesis. In this paper we show that recombinant epsilon subunit from which 45 amino acids were deleted from the C-terminus is as active as full-length epsilon subunit in restoring ATP synthesis to membranes containing CF1-epsilon. However, the truncated form of the epsilon subunit was significantly less effective as an inhibitor of the ATPase activity of CF1-epsilon, both in solution and bound to thylakoid membranes. Thus, the C-terminus of the epsilon subunit is more involved in regulation of activity, by inhibiting ATP hydrolysis, than in ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the ability of subunits beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon of CF1, the F1-ATPase of chloroplasts, to interact with exposed CF0 in EDTA-treated, partially CF1-depleted thylakoid membranes. We measured the ability of subunits beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon to stimulate the rate of photophosphorylation under continuous light and, for subunit beta, also the ability to diminish the proton leakage through exposed CF0 by deceleration of the decay of electrochromic absorption transients under flashing light. The greatest effect was caused by subunit beta, followed by gamma/delta/epsilon. Pairwise combinations of gamma, delta, and epsilon or each of these subunits alone were only marginally effective. Subunit gamma from the thermophilic bacterium PS 3 in combination with chloroplast delta and epsilon was as effective as chloroplast gamma. The finding that the small CF1 subunits in concert and the beta subunit by itself specifically interacted with the exposed proton channel CF0, qualifies the previous concept of subunit delta acting particularly as a plug to the open CF0 channel. The interactions between the channel and the catalytic portion of the enzyme seem to involve most of the small, and at least beta of the large subunits.  相似文献   

4.
Catalytic and noncatalytic sites of the chloroplast coupling factor (CF1) were selectively modified by incubation with the dialdehyde derivative of fluorescent adenosine diphosphate analog 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate. The modified CF1 was reconstituted with EDTA-treated thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts. The effects of light-induced transmembrane proton gradient and phosphate ions on the fluorescence of 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate, covalently bound to the catalytic sites of ATP synthase, were studied. Quenching of fluorescence of covalently bound 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate was observed under illumination of thylakoid membranes with saturating white light. Addition of inorganic phosphate to the reaction mixture in the dark increased the fluorescence of the label. Quenching reappeared under repeated illumination; however, addition of phosphate ions had no effect on the fluorescence yield in this case. When 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate was covalently bound to noncatalytic sites of ATP synthase, no similar fluorescence changes were observed. The relation between the observed changes of 1,N6-ethenoadenosine diphosphate fluorescence and the mechanism of energy-dependent structural changes in the catalytic site of ATP synthase is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The [epsilon] subunit of the chloroplast ATP synthase functions in part to prevent wasteful ATP hydrolysis by the enzyme. In addition, [epsilon] together with the remainder of the catalytic portion of the synthase (CF1) is required to block the nonproductive leak of protons through the membrane-embedded component of the synthase (CFO). Mutant [epsilon] subunits of the spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplast ATP synthase that lack 5, 11, or 20 amino acids from their N termini ([epsilon]-[delta]5N, [epsilon]-[delta]11N, and [epsilon]-[delta]20N, respectively), were overexpressed as inclusion bodies. Using a procedure that resulted in the folding of full-length, recombinant [epsilon] in a biologically active form, none of these truncated forms resulted in [epsilon] that inhibited the ATPase activity of CF1 deficient in [epsilon], CF1(-[epsilon]). Yet, the [epsilon]-[delta]5N and [epsilon]-[delta]11N peptides significantly inhibited the ATPase activity of CF1(-[epsilon]) bound to CFO in NaBr-treated thylakoids. Although full-length [epsilon] rapidly inhibited the ATPase activity of CF1(-[epsilon]) in solution or bound to CFO, an extended period was required for the truncated forms to inhibit membrane-bound CF1(-[epsilon]). Despite the fact that [epsilon]-[delta]5N significantly inhibited the ATPase activity of CF1(-[epsilon]) bound to CFO, it did not block the proton conductance through CFO in NaBr-treated thylakoids reconstituted with CF1(-[epsilon]). Based on selective proteolysis and the binding of 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonic acid, each of the truncated peptides gained significant secondary structure after folding. These results strongly suggest (a) that the N terminus of [epsilon] is important in its binding to CF1, (b) that CF0 stabilizes [epsilon] binding to the entire ATP synthase, and (c) that the N terminus may play some role in the regulation of proton flux through CFO.  相似文献   

6.
R. McC. Lilley  D. A. Walker 《BBA》1974,368(3):269-278
1. The rate of 3-phosphoglycerate reduction in extracts from spinach chloroplasts, assayed by spectrophotometric measurement of 3-phosphoglycerate-dependent NADPH oxidation, was strongly inhibited by ADP. AMP was much less inhibitory.

2. Oxygen evolution by reconstituted chloroplasts with 3-phosphoglycerate as substrate was also inhibited by the addition of ADP or following uncoupling by added NH4Cl.

3. In all cases the inhibitory effects of ADP were reversed by addition of phosphocreatine and creatine phosphokinase activity.

4. The stoichiometry of 3-phosphoglycerate reduction to NADPH oxidation in chloroplast extracts was 1:1 and there was negligible turnover of the Benson-Calvin cycle in either chloroplast extracts or in reconstituted chloroplasts under the particular conditions employed.

5. The maximum rate of 3-phosphoglycerate-dependent O2 evolution by reconstituted chloroplasts was ultimately limited by NADP reduction and photo-phosphorylation, and was similar to the maximum rate of oxygen evolution under optimal conditions by intact chloroplasts. In the presence of sufficient ADP phosphorylating activity, the rate of enzymic 3-phosphoglycerate reduction was relatively high. The inhibition of this reaction by ADP may represent a control mechanism in photosynthesis.  相似文献   


7.
A modified ‘cold chase’ technique was used to study tight [14C]ADP and [14C]ATP binding to noncatalytic sites of chloroplast ATP synthase (CF0F1). The binding was very low in the dark and sharply increased with light intensity. Dissociation of labeled nucleotides incorporated into noncatalytic sites of CF0F1 or CF1 reconstituted with EDTA-treated thylakoid membranes was also found to be light-dependent. Time dependence of nucleotide dissociation is described by the first order equation with a k d of about 5 min−1. The exposure of thylakoid membranes to 0.7–24.8 μM nucleotides leads to filling of up to two noncatalytic sites of CF0F1. The sites differ in their specificity: one preferentially binds ADP, whereas the other – ATP. A much higher ATP/ADP ratio of nucleotides bound at noncatalytic sites of isolated CF1 dramatically decreases upon its reconstitution with EDTA-treated thylakoid membranes. It is suggested that the decrease is caused by conformational changes in one of the α subunits induced by its interaction with the δ subunit and/or subunit I–II when CF1 becomes bound to a thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

8.
An isolation procedure is worked out and properties are studied of CF1 ATPase from chloroplasts with changed submolecular structure. The enzyme, isolated by chlorophorm treatment, produced Ca-dependent ATPase activity in water solution. As compared with the enzyme isolated by well known Lien and Racker method, the enzyme preparation obtained is slightly activated by heating, is not activated by trypsin and has a lesser ability to recover ATP synthesis in EDTA-treated chloroplasts. Purification on DEAE-Sephadex produced the enzyme preparation free of delta-subunit. Chlorophorm treatment is suggested to change submolecular protein structure, in particular, loosening of the link of delta-subunit with other enzyme subunits. The data obtained suggest that delta-subunit participates in the binding of CF1 ATPase with chloroplast membrane.  相似文献   

9.
By using gel filtration chromatography, following the technique of Hummel and Dreyer (Hummel, J., and Dreyer, W. (1962) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 63, 532-534), the adenine nucleotide-binding sites of isolated soluble chloroplast ATPase (CF1) and of the beta subunit were studied. CF1 possesses six adenine nucleotide-binding sites: two high affinity sites for ADP or ATP (KdH = 1-5 microM) in addition to one site where endogenous not-exchangeable ADP is bound, and three low affinity sites binding ADP or ATP with a dissociation constant (KdL = 15-20 microM) which is considerably increased in the presence of pyrophosphate. KdH is not modified by addition of pyrophosphate. The stability of nucleotide binding at the low affinity sites increases after heat activation of CF1. Removal of the delta or epsilon subunits on CF1 affects neither the number nor the binding parameters of the nucleotide-binding sites. The purified beta subunit possesses one easily exchangeable site/subunit. It is proposed that the low affinity sites on CF1 are the catalytic sites.  相似文献   

10.
The treatment of chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) with dithiothreitol or with trypsin modifies the gamma subunit. Reduction of the gamma subunit disulfide bond in CF1 in solution with dithiothreitol enhances the dissociation of epsilon (Duhe, R. J., and Selman, B. R. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1017, 70-78). The Ca(2+)-ATPase activity of either oxidized or reduced CF1 increases as the enzyme is diluted. Added epsilon subunit inhibits the Ca(2+)-ATPase activity of both forms of the diluted CF1, suggesting that epsilon dissociation is the cause of activation by dilution. Half-maximal activation occurred at much higher concentrations of the reduced CF1, indicating that reduction decreases the affinity for epsilon about 20-fold. Immunoblotting techniques show that there is only one epsilon subunit/CF1 in intact chloroplasts, in thylakoid membranes, and in solution. No epsilon is released from CF1 in thylakoids under conditions of ATP synthesis. The gamma subunit of CF1 in illuminated thylakoids is specifically cleaved by trypsin. CF1 purified from thylakoids treated with trypsin in the light is deficient in epsilon subunit, and has a high rate of ATP hydrolysis. Added epsilon neither inhibits the ATPase activity of, nor binds tightly to the cleaved enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
B Mitra  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1988,27(1):245-250
The delta- and epsilon-polypeptides were removed from chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1). The resulting enzyme, CF1(-delta, epsilon), is a stable active ATPase containing only alpha-, beta-, and gamma-polypeptides. The dependence of the steady-state kinetics of ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by CF1(-delta, epsilon) on the concentrations of ATP and ADP was found to be essentially the same as by activated CF1. Nucleotide binding studies with CF1(-delta, epsilon) revealed three binding sites: a nondissociable ADP site (site 1), a tight MgATP binding site (site 2), and a site that binds ADP and ATP with a dissociation constant in the micromolar range (site 3). Similar results have been obtained with CF1. For both CF1 and CF1(-delta, epsilon), the binding of MgATP at site 2 is tight only in the presence of Mg2+. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer was used to map distances between the gamma-sulfhydryl ("dark" site) and gamma-disulfide and between the gamma-sulfhydryl and the three nucleotide sites. These distances are within 5% of the corresponding distances on CF1. These results indicate that removal of the delta- and epsilon-polypeptides from CF1 does not cause significant changes in the structure, kinetics, and nucleotide binding sites of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The ATP synthase of chloroplasts consists of the proton channel, CF0, and the catalytic part, CF1, which carries nucleotide-binding sites on subunits alpha and beta. The still poorly understood interaction between CF0 and the catalytic sites on CF1 is mediated by the smaller subunits gamma, delta and epsilon of CF1. We investigated the ability of purified delta to block proton leakage through CF0 channels after their exposure by removal of the CF1 counterpart. Thylakoids were partially depleted of CF1 by EDTA treatment. This increased their proton permeability and thereby reduced the rate of photophosphorylation. Subunit delta was isolated and purified by FPLC [Engelbrecht, S. and Junge, W. (1987) FEBS Lett. 219, 321-325]. Addition of delta to EDTA-treated thylakoids reconstituted high rates of phenazine-methosulfate-mediated photophosphorylation. Since delta does not interact with nucleotides by itself, the reconstitution was due to a reduction of the proton leakage through open CF0 channels. The molar ratio of purified delta over exposed CF0, which started to elicit this effect, was 3:1. However, if delta was added together with purified CF1 lacking delta, in a 1:1 molar ratio, the relative amount over exposed CF0 was as low as 0.06. This corroborated our previous conclusion [Lill, H., Engelbrecht, S., Sch?nknecht, G. and Junge, W. (1986) Eur. J. Biochem. 160, 627-634] that only a very small fraction of exposed CF0 was actually proton-conducting but with a very high unit conductance. CF1 including delta was apparently rebound preferentially to open CF0 channels. Although the ability of delta to control proton conduction through CF0 was evident, it remains to be established whether delta acts as a gated proton valve or as a conformational transducer in the integral CF0CF1 ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
After isolation and purification, the H+-ATPase from chloroplasts, CF0F1, contains one endogenous ADP at a catalytic site, and two endogenous ATP at non-catalytic sites. Incubation with 2-azido-[alpha-32P]ADP leads to tight binding of azidonucleotides. Free nucleotides were removed by three consecutive passages through centrifugation columns, and upon UV-irradiation most of the label was covalently bound. The labelled enzyme was digested by trypsin, the peptides were separated by ion exchange chromatography into nitreno-AMP, nitreno-ADP and nitreno-ATP labelled peptides, and these were then separated by reversed phase chromatography. Amino acid sequence analysis was used to identify the type of the nucleotide binding site. After incubation with 2-azido-[alpha-32P]ADP, the covalently bound label was found exclusively at beta-Tyr-362. Incubation conditions with 2-azido-[alpha-32P]ADP were varied, and conditions were found which allow selective binding of the label to different catalytic sites, designated as 1, 2 and 3 in order of decreasing affinity for ADP, and either catalytic site 1 or catalytic sites 1 and 2 together were labelled. For measurements of the degree of inhibition by covalent modification, CF0F1 was reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine liposomes, and the membranes were energised by an acid-base transition in the presence of a K+/valinomycin diffusion potential. The rate of ATP synthesis was 50-80 s(-1), and the rate of ATP hydrolysis was 15 s(-1) measured under multi-site conditions. Covalent modification of either catalytic site 1 or catalytic sites 1 and 2 together inhibited ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis equally, the degree of inhibition being proportional to the degree of modification. Extrapolation to complete inhibition indicates that derivatisation of catalytic site 1 leads to complete inhibition when 1 mol 2-nitreno-ADP is bound per mol CF0F1. Derivatisation of catalytic sites 1 and 2 together extrapolates to complete inhibition when 2 mol 2-nitreno-ADP are bound per CF0F1. The rate of ATP synthesis and the rate of ATP hydrolysis were measured as a function of the substrate concentration from multi-site to uni-site conditions with derivatised CF0F1 and with non-derivatised CF0F1. ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis under uni-site and under multi-site condition were inhibited by covalent modification of either catalytic site 1 or catalytic sites 1 and 2 together. The results indicate that derivatisation of site 1 inhibits activation of the enzyme and that cooperative interactions occur at least between the catalytic sites 2 and 3.  相似文献   

14.
1. Incubation of soluble spinach Coupling Factor 1 (CF1) with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) results in the inactivation of the ATPase. The DCCD inactivation is time- and concentration-dependent. Complete inactivation of the CF1-ATPase activity requires the binding of 2 mol of DCCD/mol of CF1. The binding sites of DCCD are located on the beta subunit of CF1. 2. DCCD modification of soluble CF1 eliminates one adenine nucleotide binding site which is exposed by dithiothreitol activation or by incubation with tentoxin. The inactivation of both the ATPase activity and the adenine nucleotide binding site are pH-dependent. The inactivation of both the ATPase activity and the adenine nucleotide binding site are pH-dependent. Half-maximal inhibition occurs at about pH 7.5. 3. The DCCD-modified CF1, reconstituted with EDTA-treated chloroplasts, is fully active is restoring proton uptake but not in restoring ATP synthesis or light-dependent adenine nucleotide exchange.  相似文献   

15.
Illumination of chloroplast thylakoid membranes results in both the release of adenine nucleotides from the tight nucleotide binding site(s) on chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) and the activation of a light-triggered ATPase activity of CF1. Because inorganic phosphate stabilizes the light-triggered ATPase activity of CF1 in the dark, the effects of Pi on the rebinding of ADP to CF1 and on the light-triggered ATPase activity have been studied. Pi appears to be a partial noncompetitive inhibitor, with respect to ADP, of adenine nucleotide binding to the tight nucleotide binding site(s) on CF1 and induces negative cooperativity. The latter result suggests the existence of heterogeneous ADP binding sites in the presence of Pi. However, even under conditions where Pi causes a 50% reduction of tightly bound ADP, the ADP-induced dark decay of the ATPase activity is still complete. It was found that Pi inhibition of the light-induced dark binding of ADP can be reversed by the removal of the Pi. Removal of Pi also induces a small but significant ATPase activity. A model for the roles of the adenine nucleotide tight binding site(s) and Pi in the modulation of the spinach CF1 ATPase activity is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescent probes were attached to the single sulfhydryl residue on the isolated epsilon polypeptide of chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1), and the modified polypeptide was reconstituted with the epsilon-deficient enzyme. A binding stoichiometry of one epsilon polypeptide per CF1 was obtained. This stoichiometry corresponded to a maximum inhibition of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity of the enzyme induced by epsilon removal. Resonance energy transfer between the modified epsilon polypeptide and fluorescent probes attached to various other sites on the enzyme allowed distance measurements between these sites and the epsilon polypeptide. The epsilon-sulfhydryl is nearly equidistant from both the disulfide (23 A) and the dark-accessible sulfhydryl (26 A) of the gamma subunit. Measurement of the distance between epsilon and the light-accessible gamma-sulfhydryl was not possible due to an apparent exclusion of modified epsilon from epsilon-deficient enzyme after modification of the light-accessible site. The distances measured between epsilon and the nucleotide binding sites on the enzyme were 62, 66, and 49 A for sites 1, 2, and 3, respectively. These measurements place the epsilon subunit in close physical proximity to the sulfhydryl-containing domains of the gamma subunit and approximately 40 A from the membrane surface. Enzyme activity measurements also indicated a close association between the epsilon and gamma subunits: epsilon removal caused a marked increase in accessibility of the gamma-disulfide bond to thiol reagents and exposed a trypsin-sensitive site on the gamma subunit. Either disulfide bond reduction or trypsin cleavage of gamma significantly enhanced the Ca2+-ATPase activity of the epsilon-deficient enzyme. Thus, the epsilon and gamma polypeptides of coupling factor 1 are closely linked, both physically and functionally.  相似文献   

17.
The H(+)-ATPase from chloroplasts, CF(0)F(1), was isolated and purified. The enzyme contained one endogenous ADP at a catalytic site, and two endogenous ATP at non-catalytic sites. Incubation with 2-azido-[alpha-(32)P]AD(T)P leads to a tight binding of the azido-nucleotides. Free nucleotides were removed by three consecutive passages through centrifugation columns, and after UV-irradiation, the label was covalently bound. The labelled enzyme was digested by trypsin, the peptides were separated by ion exchange chromatography into nitreno-AMP, nitreno-ADP and nitreno-ATP labelled peptides, and these were then separated by reversed phase chromatography. Amino acid sequence analysis was used to identify the type of the nucleotide binding site. After incubation with 2-azido-[alpha-(32)P]ADP, the covalently bound label was found exclusively at beta-Tyr-362, i.e. binding occurs only to catalytic sites. Incubation conditions with 2-azido-[alpha-(32)P]ADP were varied, and conditions were found which allow selective binding of the label to different catalytic sites, either to catalytic site 2 or to catalytic site 3. For measurements of the degree of inhibition by covalent modification, CF(0)F(1) was reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine liposomes, and the membranes were energised by an acid-base transition in the presence of a K(+)/valinomycin diffusion potential. The rate of ATP synthesis was 120 s(-1), and the rate of ATP hydrolysis was 20 s(-1), both measured under multi-site conditions. Covalent modification of either catalytic site 2 or catalytic site 3 inhibited both ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis, the degree of inhibition being proportional to the degree of modification. Extrapolation to complete inhibition indicates that modification of one catalytic site, either site 2 or site 3, is sufficient to completely block multi-site ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis. The rate of ATP synthesis and the rate of ATP hydrolysis were measured as a function of the substrate concentration from multi-site to uni-site conditions with covalently modified CF(0)F(1) and with non-modified CF(0)F(1). The result was that uni-site ATP synthesis and ATP hydrolysis were not inhibited by covalent modification of either catalytic site 2 or site 3. The results indicate cooperative interactions between catalytic nucleotide binding sites during multi-site catalysis, whereas neither uni-site ATP synthesis nor uni-site ATP hydrolysis require interaction with other sites.  相似文献   

18.
The conserved residue Gly47 of the chloroplast ATP synthase ε subunit was substituted with Leu, Arg, Ala and Glu by site-directed mutagenesis. This process generated the mutants εG47L, εG47R, εG47A and εG47E, respectively. All the ε variants showed lower inhibitory effects on the soluble CF1(-ε) Ca^2 -ATPase compared with wild-type ε. In reduced conditions, εG47E and εG47R had a lower inhibitory effect on the oxidized CF1(-ε) Ca^2 -ATPase compared with wild-type ε. In contrast, εG47L and εG47Aincreased the Ca^2 -ATPase activity of soluble oxidized CF1(-ε). The replacement of Gly47 significantly impaired the interaction between the subunit ε and γ in an in vitro binding assay. Further study showed that all ε variants were more effective in blocking proton leakage from the thylakoid membranes. This enhanced ATP synthesis of the chloroplast and restored ATP synthesis activity of the reconstituted membranes to a level that was more efficient than that achieved by wild-type ε. These results indicate that the conserved Gly47 residue of the ε subunit is very important for maintaining the structure and function of the ε subunitand may affect the interaction between the ε subunit, β subunit of CF1 and subunit Ⅲ of CF0, therebyregulating the ATP hydrolysis and synthesis, as well as the proton translocation role of the subunit Ⅲ of CF0.  相似文献   

19.
Nowak KF  McCarty RE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3273-3279
The ATP synthases from chloroplasts and Escherichia coli are regulated by several factors, one of which is the epsilon subunit. This small subunit is also required for ATP synthesis. Thylakoid membranes reconstituted with CF1 lacking the epsilon subunit (CF1-epsilon) exhibit no ATP synthesis and very high ATP hydrolysis. Either native or recombinant epsilon restores ATP synthesis and inhibits ATP hydrolysis. Previously, we showed that truncated epsilon, lacking the last 45 C-terminal amino acids, restored ATP synthesis to membranes reconstituted with CF1-epsilon but was not an efficient inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis. In this paper, we show that this truncated epsilon is unable to inhibit ATP hydrolysis when Mg(2+) is the divalent cation present, both for the enzyme in solution and on the thylakoid membrane. In addition, the rate of reduction of the disulfide bond of the gamma subunit by dithiothreitol is not decreased by truncated epsilon, although full-length epsilon greatly impedes reduction. Thylakoid membranes can synthesize ATP at the expense of proton gradients generated by pH transitions in the dark. Our reconstituted membranes are able to produce a limited amount of ATP under these "acid-bath" conditions, with approximately equal amounts produced by the membranes containing wild-type epsilon and those containing truncated epsilon. However, the membranes containing truncated epsilon exhibit much higher background ATP hydrolysis under the same acid-bath conditions, leading to the conclusion that, without the C-terminus of epsilon, the CF1CFo is unable to check unwanted ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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