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1.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been made against each of the five subunits of ECF1 (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon), and these have been used in topology studies and for examination of the role of individual subunits in the functioning of the enzyme. All of the mAbs obtained reacted with ECF1, while several failed to react with ECF1F0, including three mAbs against the gamma subunit (gamma II, gamma III, and gamma IV), one mAb against delta, and two mAbs against epsilon (epsilon I and epsilon II). These topology data are consistent with the gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits being located at the interface between the F1 and F0 parts of the complex. Two forms of ECF1 were used to study the effects of mAbs on the ATPase activity of the enzyme: ECF1 with the epsilon subunit tightly bound and acting to inhibit activity and ECF1* in which the delta and epsilon subunits had been removed by organic solvent treatment. ECF1* had an ATPase activity under standard conditions of 93 mumol of ATP hydrolyzed min-1 mg-1, cf. an activity of 7.5 units mg-1 for our standard ECF1 preparation and 64 units mg-1 for enzyme in which the epsilon subunit had been removed by trypsin treatment. The protease digestion of ECF1* reduced activity to 64 units mg-1 in a complicated process involving an inhibition of activity by cleavage of the alpha subunit, activation by cleavage of gamma, and inhibition with cleavage of the beta subunit. mAbs to the gamma subunit, gamma II and gamma III, activated ECF1 by 4.4- and 2.4-fold, respectively, by changing the affinity of the enzyme for the epsilon subunit, as evidenced by density gradient centrifugation experiments. The gamma-subunit mAbs did not alter the ATPase activity of ECF1*- or trypsin-treated enzyme. The alpha-subunit mAb (alpha I) activated ECF1 by a factor of 2.5-fold and ECF1F0 by 1.3-fold, but inhibited the ATPase activity of ECF1* by 30%.  相似文献   

2.
The coupling factor, F1-ATPase of Escherichia coli (ECF1) contains five different subunits, alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon. Properties of delta-deficient ECF1 have previously been described. F1-ATPase containing only the alpha, beta, and gamma subunits was prepared from E. coli by passage of delta-deficient ECF1 through an affinity column containing immobilized antibodies to the epsilon subunit. The delta, epsilon-deficient enzyme has normal ATPase activity but cannot bind to ECF1-depleted membrane vesicles. Both the delta and epsilon subunits are required for the binding of delta, epsilon-deficient ECF1 to membranes and the restoration of oxidative phosphorylation. Either delta or epsilon will bind to the deficient enzyme to form a four-subunit complex. Neither four-subunit enzyme binds to depleted membranes. The epsilon subunit, does, however, slightly improve the binding affinity between delta and delta-deficient enzyme suggesting a possible interaction between the two subunits. Neither subunit binds to trypsin-treated ECF1, which contains only the alpha and beta subunits. A role for gamma in the binding of epsilon to F1 is suggested. epsilon does not bind to ECF1-depleted membranes. Therefore, the in vitro reconstitution of depleted membranes requires an initial complex formation between epsilon and the rest of ECF1 prior to membrane attachment. Reconstitution experiments indicate that only one epsilon is required per functional ECF1 molecule.  相似文献   

3.
Digestion of the F1-ATPase of Escherichia coli with trypsin stimulated ATP hydrolytic activity and removed the delta and epsilon subunits of the enzyme. A species represented by the formula alpha 1(3) beta 1(3) gamma 1, where alpha 1, beta 1 and gamma 1 are forms of the native alpha, beta and gamma subunits which have been attacked by trypsin, was formed by trypsin digestion in the presence of ATP. In the presence of ATP and MgCl2, conversion of gamma to gamma 1 was retarded and the enzyme retained the epsilon subunit. These results imply that binding of ATP to the beta subunits alters the conformation of ECF1 to increase the accessibility of the gamma subunit to trypsin. The likely trypsin cleavage sites in the alpha, beta and gamma subunits are discussed. ECF1 from the alpha subunit-defective mutant uncA401, or after treatment with N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide or 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan, was present in a conformation in which the gamma subunit was readily accessible to trypsin and could not be protected by the presence of ATP and MgCl2. In a similar manner to native E. coli F1-ATPase, the hydrolytic activity of the trypsin-digested enzyme was stimulated by the detergent lauryldimethylamine N-oxide. Since the digested enzyme lacked the epsilon subunit, a putative inhibitor of hydrolytic activity, a mechanism for the stimulation which involves loss or movement of this subunit is untenable.  相似文献   

4.
Monoclonal antibodies directed against epitopes on each of the five subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon) of the Escherichia coli F1 ATPase (ECF1) have been prepared and used to localize the subunits in the enzyme complex. Fab' fragments, prepared by pepsin digestion of the antibodies, were bound to ECF1 and visualized by cryoelectron microscopy of the unstained, frozen hydrated ECF1-Fab' complexes. Besides aiding in the identification of the ECF1 subunits, addition of Fab's to the specimen fortuitously offers additional advantages in this technique. ECF1 labeled with anti-alpha Fab' is uniformly oriented in the amorphous ice layer, in contrast to unlabeled ECF1, which exhibits a multitude of projection views when examined in ice. Almost all complexes display a triangular projection, which image averaging reveals to be a hexagonal view of ECF1 with Fab' fragments labeling every other peripheral subunit, confirming the alternating arrangement of alpha and beta subunits in the enzyme. A density in the interior of the structure is positioned asymmetrically, adjacent to an unlabeled peripheral mass, indicating that its primary linkage is to a beta rather than an alpha subunit. The composition of the asymmetric density was explored by examining the trypsin-treated ECF1, taking advantage of the unique orientation induced by the binding of anti-alpha Fab'. Trypsin treatment releases the delta and epsilon subunits and cleaves the gamma subunit; the internal density is reduced but not eliminated, showing the contribution of the gamma subunit to the residual structure, and suggesting that the loss of the delta and epsilon subunits, or a structural rearrangement of the gamma subunit, is responsible for its smaller size.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
A procedure for the preparation of coupling factor 1 (F1) from Escherichia coli lacking subunits delta and epsilon is described. Using chloroform and dimethyl sulfoxide, we can isolate F1 containing only subunits alpha, beta, and gamma [F1(alpha beta gamma)] directly from membrane vesicles in 10-mg quantities. Pure and active subunits delta and epsilon were prepared from five-subunit F1 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. After addition of these subunits, F1(alpha beta gamma) is as active in reconstituting ATP-dependent transhydrogenase as five-subunit F1. The ATPase activity of F1 (alpha beta gamma) is inhibited by subunit epsilon in a 1:1 stoichiometry to the same extent (approximately equal to 90%) and with the same affinity (Ki = 0.2-0.8 nM) as reported earlier [Dunn, S.D. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 7354-7359]. In the presence of either delta or epsilon, F1(alpha beta gamma) binds to F1-depleted membrane vesicles and to liposomes containing the membrane sector (F0) of the ATP synthase to an extent commensurate with the F0 content. The binding ratios epsilon/F1 (alpha beta gamma) and probably also delta/F1 (alpha beta gamma) are close to unity. The specific, delta- or epsilon-deficient F1.F0 complexes presumably formed show ATPase activities sensitive to subunit epsilon but not to dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, and no energy-transfer capabilities. Binding studies at different pH values suggest that F1-F0 interactions in the presence of both subunits delta and epsilon are similar to a combination of those mediated by delta or epsilon alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
C Urban  M R Salton 《Microbios》1985,44(177):21-32
Limited trypsin and chymotrypsin digestions were performed on the latent F1-ATPase from M. lysodeikticus, and subsequent analysis on SDS-polyacrylamide gels revealed subunit profiles with degraded alpha and delta subunits similar to those of ATPase preparations with spontaneously occurring lower degrees of latency. The ATPase obtained from M. lysodeikticus membranes after n-butanol extraction was also non-latent with similar SDS-gel patterns to the aforementioned ATPases. In addition, the sensitive technique of crossed immunoelectrophoresis was used to show that all of the above ATPases contained alpha, beta, gamma, delta and epsilon subunits but some of them were in degraded forms. Although the delta subunit was the first to be cleaved, the loss of latency can be attributed to the degradation of the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

7.
The activation by proteases of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase of chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) has been investigated. Using low concentrations of papain and trypsin, the increase in ATPase activity and the degradation of the five subunits of CF1 were compared. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of protease-treated CF1 revealed that the delta subunit was very rapidly degraded and that the alpha and beta subunits were clipped. The gamma and epsilon subunits were more resistant to digestion. The modification of the alpha subunit of latent CF1 most closely correlated with the activation of Ca2+-ATPase activity. Trypsin treatment of dithiothreitol-activated CF1 resulted in a very rapid increase in Ca2+-ATPase activity and a corresponding rapid cleavage of the gamma subunit to a 25,000-dalton species. With more prolonged treatment, the 25,000-dalton species was cleaved to fragments of 14,000 and 11,000-daltons. Dithiothreitol treatment did not alter the rate of attack on the other subunits. The gamma subunit of heat-activated CF1 was also more susceptible to protease digestion. The increased protease sensitivity of the gamma subunit of soluble CF1 after treatment with dithiothreitol or heat mimics the increased protease sensitivity of the gamma subunit of bound CF1 when thylakoids are treated with trypsin during illumination (Moroney, J. V., and McCarty, R. E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 5915-5920). These results suggest that the conformational changes that occur when purified CF1 is exposed to dithiothreitol are similar to those that CF1 bound to thylakoid membranes undergoes under illumination.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The fluorescent thiol reagent 2-(4'-iodoacetamidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (IAANS) labels the gamma, delta, and one of the three beta subunits of the F1 ATPase from Escherichia coli (ECF1). This is the same beta subunit which incorporates 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan (Nbf) [H. Stan-Lotter and P. D. Bragg (1986) Eur. J. Biochem. 154, 321-327]. After inactivation of ECF1 with N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), IAANS labels in addition to the beta, gamma, and delta subunits also the alpha subunit. This suggests a conformational change of ECF1 upon binding of DCCD. The beta subunit which incorporates DCCD does does not bind IAANS. Likewise, IAANS-modified ECF1 does not incorporate DCCD into the same beta subunit. It is concluded that DCCD and Nbf bind to different beta subunits. Since neither of these reagents binds to that beta subunit which can be crosslinked to to the epsilon subunit by 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide, these data show that there is a difference in the chemical reactivity of each of the three beta subunits of ECF1, despite their identical primary structures. This suggests that there is an asymmetry in the F1 molecule.  相似文献   

10.
J Mendel-Hartvig  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10987-10991
The rate of trypsin cleavage of the epsilon subunit of Escherichia coli F1F0 (ECF1F0) is shown to be ligand-dependent as measured by Western analysis using monoclonal antibodies. The cleavage of the epsilon subunit was rapid in the presence of ADP alone, ATP + EDTA, or AMP-PNP + Mg2+, but slow when Pi was added along with ADP + Mg2+ or when ATP + Mg2+ was added to generate ADP + Pi (+Mg2+) in the catalytic site. Trypsin treatment of ECF1Fo was also shown to increase enzymic activity on a time scale corresponding to that of the cleavage of the epsilon subunit, indicating that the epsilon subunit inhibits ATPase activity in ECF1Fo. The ligand-dependent conformational changes in the epsilon subunit were also examined in cross-linking experiments using the water-soluble carbodiimide 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]-carbodiimide (EDC). In the presence of ATP + Mg2+ or ADP + Pi + Mg2+, the epsilon subunit cross-linked product was much reduced. Prior reaction of ECF1Fo with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), under conditions in which only the Fo part was modified, blocked the conformational changes induced by ligand binding. When the enzyme complex was reacted with DCCD in ATP + EDTA, the cleavage of the epsilon subunit was rapid and yield of cross-linking of beta to epsilon subunit low, whether trypsin cleavage was conducted in ATP + EDTA or ATP + Mg2+. When enzyme was reacted with DCCD in ATP + Mg2+, cleavage of the epsilon subunit was slow and yield of cross-linking of beta to epsilon high, under all nucleotide conditions for proteolysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The nucleotide sequence of the operon of the ATPase complex of an acidothermophilic archaebacterium, Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, has been determined. In addition to the three previously reported genes for the alpha, beta, and c (proteolipid) subunits of the ATPase complex (Denda, K., Konishi, J., Oshima, T., Date, T., and Yoshida, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7119-7121), the operon contained three other genes encoding hydrophilic proteins with molecular masses 25, 13, and 7 kDa. The 25-kDa protein is the third largest subunit (gamma), the 13-kDa protein is most likely the fourth subunit (delta), and the 7-kDa protein may correspond to an unknown subunit of the ATPase, tentatively named as epsilon subunit. They do not have significant sequence similarity to subunits in F0F1-ATPases and eukaryotic V-type ATPases, whereas the other three subunits, alpha, beta, and c, have homologous counterparts in F0F1- and V-type ATPases. The order of the genes in the operon was delta alpha beta gamma epsilon c. The S. acidocaldarius ATPase operon differed from the eucabacterial F0F1-ATPase operon in that the former contains only one gene for a hydrophobic subunit at the most downstream part of the operon whereas the latter has three hydrophobic F0 genes preceding five hydrophilic F1 genes.  相似文献   

12.
A sequence of 10 amino acids (I-C-S-D-K-T-G-T-L-T) of ion motive ATPases such as Na+/K+-ATPase is similar to the sequence of the beta subunit of H+-ATPases, including that of Escherichia coli (I-T-S-T-K-T-G-S-I-T) (residues 282-291). The Asp (D) residue phosphorylated in ion motive ATPase corresponds to Thr (T) of the beta subunit. This substitution may be reasonable because there is no phosphoenzyme intermediate in the catalytic cycle of F1-ATPase. We replaced Thr-285 of the beta subunit by an Asp residue by in vitro mutagenesis and reconstituted the alpha beta gamma complex from the mutant (or wild-type) beta and wild-type alpha and gamma subunits. The uni- and multisite ATPase activities of the alpha beta gamma complex with mutant beta subunits were about 20 and 30% of those with the wild-type subunit. The rate of ATP binding (k1) of the mutant complex under uni-site conditions was about 10-fold less than that of the wild-type complex. These results suggest that Thr-285, or the region in its vicinity, is essential for normal catalysis of the H+-ATPase. The mutant complex could not form a phosphoenzyme under the conditions where the H+/K+-ATPase is phosphorylated, suggesting that another residue(s) may also be involved in formation of the intermediate in ion motive ATPase. The wild-type alpha beta gamma complex had slightly different kinetic properties from the wild-type F1, possibly because it did not contain the epsilon subunit.  相似文献   

13.
1. Five subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon) of an ATPase from a thermophilic bacterium PS3 were purified in the presence of 8 M urea by ion exchange chromatography. Then the ATPase activity was reconstituted by mixing the subunit solutions and incubating them at 20-45 degrees, at pH 6.3 to 7.0. 2. Mixtures containing beta + gamma or alpha + beta + delta regained ATP-hydrolyzing activity, but mixtures of alpha + beta and beta + delta did not. Combinations not including beta were all inactive. 3. The ATPase activity reconstituted from alpha + beta + delta was thermolabile and insensitive to NaN3, whereas the activities obtained from mixtures containing beta and gamma were thermostable and sensitive to NaN3, like the native ATPase. 4. The assemblies containing both beta and gamma subunits had the same mobility as the native ATPase molecule on gel electrophoresis, those without the gamma subunit moved more rapidly toward the anode. 5. Subunits epsilon and delta did not inhibit the ATPase activity of either the assembly (alpha + beta + gamma) or the native ATPase.  相似文献   

14.
Cross-linking reagents have been used to link covalently adjacent subunits of solubilized spinach chloroplast coupling factor 1, which is a latent ATPase. 1,5-Difluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, dimethyl-3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate, and dimethylsuberimidate are able to form bridges of 3 to 11 A between amino groups, and hydrogen peroxide and the o-phenanthroline-cupric ion complex catalyze the oxidation of intrinsic sulfhydryl groups. The five individual subunit bands (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon) and several new aggregate bands can be separated by means of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The same four fastest moving aggregate bands, as characterized by their mobilities, migrate more slowly than the heaviest subunit band and appear with all of the cross-linkers employed. The subunit composition of the aggregate bands has been determined through the use of the reversible cross-linkers, dimethyldithiobispropionimidate, (o-phenanthroline)2Cu(II), and H2O2, and two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in which aggregates are separated in the first dimension, the disulfide cross-links are cleaved, and the individual subunits present in the aggregates are separated in the second dimension. The subunits are detected by Coomassie brilliant blue staining and by labeling some of the sulfhydryl groups of the gamma and epsilon subunits with radioactive N-ethylmaleimide. The results obtained indicate that the alpha and beta subunits can cross-link directly with each of the other subunits, that two beta subunits are adjacent, and that gamma epsilon, gamma epsilon 2, alpha delta, and beta delta aggregates are present. A minimal subunit stoichiometry consistent with these results is alpha 2 beta 2 gamma delta epsilon 2. A possible structural model of the coupling factor is derived from the data. Similar, but less extensive, experiments have been carried out with the heat-activated coupling factor (which is an ATPase); no differences in the spatial arrangement of subunits are detected from the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis of the cross-linked aggregates.  相似文献   

15.
Cysteine residues have been exchanged for serine residues at positions 10 and 108 in the epsilon subunit of the Escherichia coli F1 ATPase by site-directed mutagenesis to create two mutants, epsilon-S10C and epsilon-S108C. These two mutants and wild-type enzyme were reacted with [14C]N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) to examine the solvent accessibility of Cys residues and with novel photoactivated cross-linkers, tetrafluorophenyl azide-maleimides (TFPAM's), to examine near-neighbor relationships of subunits. In native wild-type F1 ATPase, NEM reacted with alpha subunits at a maximal level of 1 mol/mol of enzyme (1 mol/3 alpha subunits) and with the delta subunit at 1 mol/mol of enzyme; other subunits were not labeled by the reagent. In the mutants epsilon-S10C and epsilon-S108C, Cys10 and Cys108, respectively, were also labeled by NEM, indicating that these are surface residues. Reaction of wild-type enzyme with TFPAM's gave cross-linking of the delta subunit to both alpha and beta subunits. Reaction of the mutants with TFPAM's also cross-linked delta to alpha and beta and in addition formed covalent links between Cys10 of the epsilon subunit and the gamma subunit and between Cys108 of the epsilon subunit and the alpha subunit. The yield of cross-linking between sites on epsilon and other subunits depended on the nucleotide conditions used; this was not the case for delta-alpha or delta-beta cross-linked products. In the presence of ATP+EDTA the yield of cross-linking between epsilon-Cys10 and gamma was high (close to 50%) while the yield of epsilon-Cys108 and alpha was low (around 10%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The preparation of highly purified F1-ATPase from Micrococcus sp. ATCC 398 by application of DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B chromatography as final step is described. This enzyme consists of five subunits of different molecular weight: alpha (65000), beta (55000),gamma (35000), delta (20000), and epsilon (17000). Disc electrophoresis on 5% polyacrylamide gels removes the epsilon-polypeptide yielding an active ATPase complex with four different subunits: alpha, beta, gamma, delta. Additionally, by variation of the ionic strength delta can (partly) removed allowing the isolation by disc electrophoresis of an active ATPase complex which consists only of three different subunits alpha, beta, and gamma. If the DEAE-Sepharose chromatography is carried out in the absence of diisopropyl phosphofluoridate (auto)proteolysis yields both an active ATPase with the subunits alpha+ (mol. wt 61000), beta, gamma, and delta and an inactive protein complex with the subunits alpha+, beta, gamma, delta, and two additional polypeptides a (mol. wt 38000) and b (mol. wt 23000). The latter two polypeptides are supposedly fragments of alpha+-chains which have become partially cleaved by (auto)proteolysis.  相似文献   

17.
The central stalk in ATP synthase, made of gamma, delta and epsilon subunits in the mitochondrial enzyme, is the key rotary element in the enzyme's catalytic mechanism. The gamma subunit penetrates the catalytic (alpha beta)(3) domain and protrudes beneath it, interacting with a ring of c subunits in the membrane that drives rotation of the stalk during ATP synthesis. In other crystals of F(1)-ATPase, the protrusion was disordered, but with crystals of F(1)-ATPase inhibited with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, the complete structure was revealed. The delta and epsilon subunits interact with a Rossmann fold in the gamma subunit, forming a foot. In ATP synthase, this foot interacts with the c-ring and couples the transmembrane proton motive force to catalysis in the (alpha beta)(3) domain.  相似文献   

18.
The arrangement of the subunits in the F1 adenosine triphosphatase of Escherichia coli has been investigated using bifunctional chemical crosslinking agents to covalently link adjacent subunits in the enzyme molecule. The synthesis of the new cleavable crosslinking agent 2,2'-dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate) is described. The crosslinked products resulting from the reaction of the enzyme with 2,2'- and 3,3'-dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate), 3,3'-dithiobis(sulfosuccinimidyl propionate), disuccinimidyl tartrate, dimethyl adipimidate, 1-ethyl-3[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide, and 1,2:3,4-diepoxybutane were analyzed by "three-dimensional" polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in which they were resolved first in a two-dimensional system. Following cleavage of the crosslinking bridge in the separated products, the constituent subunits were identified by a further one-dimensional gel electrophoresis step. This procedure greatly improved the precision with which crosslinked subunits could be identified. It largely overcame problems due to abnormal migration of crosslinked species on gel electrophoresis and to the formation of multiple species of the same crosslinked subunit dimers. The following crosslinked subunit dimers were identified: alpha alpha, alpha beta, beta gamma, alpha delta, beta epsilon, and gamma epsilon. The trimer alpha alpha delta was recognized. The formation of alpha alpha over alpha beta dimers was favored when more polar crosslinking agents were used. The constraints placed by the finding of adjacent alpha subunits upon current models for the arrangement of the subunits in the F1 ATPase are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of guanidine hydrochloride on ATPase activity, gel filtration, turbidity, and the fluorescence emission intensity of mitochondrial F1-ATPase was examined. Purified F1 from bovine heart mitochondria was slowly inactivated at low denaturant concentration, and inactivation was associated with delta and epsilon subunit dissociation. delta and epsilon subunits were bound together to form a stable and soluble heterodimer. In parallel, appearance of turbidity was observed. This was caused by the formation of alpha3beta3gamma non-covalent aggregates, as analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Short periods of exposition of the F1 complex to high concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride (0.8-3 M) again induced deltaepsilon dissociation as a heterodimer and the formation of an inactive alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex. This eventually dissociated progressively into single subunits caused by partial unfolding, as evidenced through changes of the protein intrinsic fluorescence emission. Our results suggest that the delta and epsilon subunits are loosely bound to alpha3beta3gamma , and play an important role in determining structural stability to isolated mitochondrial F1-ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
Two stalks link the F(1) and F(0) sectors of ATP synthase. The central stalk contains the gamma and epsilon subunits and is thought to function in rotational catalysis as a rotor driving conformational changes in the catalytic alpha(3)beta(3) complex. The two b subunits and the delta subunit associate to form b(2)delta, a second, peripheral stalk extending from the membrane up the side of alpha(3)beta(3) and binding to the N-terminal regions of the alpha subunits, which are approx. 125 A from the membrane. This second stalk is essential for binding F(1) to F(0) and is believed to function as a stator during rotational catalysis. In vitro, b(2)delta is a highly extended complex held together by weak interactions. Recent work has identified the domains of b which are essential for dimerization and for interaction with delta. Disulphide cross-linking studies imply that the second stalk is a permanent structure which remains associated with one alpha subunit or alphabeta pair. However, the weak interactions between the polypeptides in b(2)delta pose a challenge for the proposed stator function.  相似文献   

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