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1.
Subunit G is an essential stalk subunit of the eukaryotic proton pump V1VO ATPase. Previously the structure of the N-terminal region, G1-59, of the 13 kDa subunit G was solved at higher resolution. Here solution NMR was performed to determine the structure of the recombinant C-terminal region (G61-101) of subunit G of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae V1VO ATPase. The protein forms an extended α-helix between residues 64 and 100, whereby the first five- and the last residues of G61-101 are flexible. The surface charge distribution of G61-101 reveals an amphiphilic character at the C-terminus due to positive and negative charge distribution at one side and a hydrophobic surface on the opposite side of the structure. The hydrophobic surface pattern is mainly formed by alanine residues. The alanine residues 72, 74 and 81 were exchanged by a single cysteine in the entire subunit G. Cysteines at positions 72 and 81 showed disulfide formation. In contrast, no crosslink could be formed for the mutant Ala74Cys. Together with the recently determined NMR solution structure of G1-59, the presented solution structure of G61-101 enabled us to present a first structural model of the entire subunit G of the S. cerevisiae V1VO ATPase.  相似文献   

2.
Projection maps of a V1-Vma5p hybrid complex, composed of subunit C (Vma5p) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae V-ATPase and the C-depleted V1 from Manduca sexta, were determined from single particle electron microscopy. V1-Vma5p consists of a headpiece and an elongated wedgelike stalk with a 2.1×3.0 nm protuberance and a 9.5×7.5 globular domain, interpreted to include Vma5p. The interaction face of Vma5p in V1 was explored by chemical modification experiments.  相似文献   

3.
A critical point in the V1 sector and entire V1VO complex is the interaction of stalk subunits G (Vma10p) and E (Vma4p). Previous work, using precipitation assays, has shown that both subunits form a complex. In this work, we have analysed the N-terminal segment of subunit G (G1–59) of the V1VO ATPase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae by using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Analyses of 1H-15N heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of G1–59 in the absence and presence of the N-terminal peptides E1–18 and E18–38 as well as the produced and purified C-terminal segment (E39–233) shows specific interactions only with the peptide fragment E18–38. The binding of this peptide occurs via the residues M1, V2, S3, and K5 as well for V22, S23, K24, A25 and R26 of G1–59. The specific E18–38/G1–59 binding has been confirmed by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy data. The E18–38 peptide has been studied by CD spectroscopy and NMR. The 3D structure of this peptide adopts a stable helix-hinge-helix formation in solution. A model structure of the E18–38/G1–59 complex reveals the orientation of E18–38 relative to G1–59 via salt-bridges of the polar residues and van der Waals forces at the very N-terminus of both segments.  相似文献   

4.
The low resolution structure of subunit d (Vma6p) of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae V-ATPase was determined from solution X-ray scattering data. The protein is a boxing glove-shaped molecule consisting of two distinct domains, with a width of about 6.5 nm and 3.5 nm, respectively. To understand the importance of the N- and C-termini inside the protein, four truncated forms of subunit d (d 11–345, d 38–345, d 1–328 and d 1–298) and mutant subunit d, with a substitution of Cys329 against Ser, were expressed, and only d 11–345, containing all six cysteine residues was soluble. The structural properties of d depends strongly on the presence of a disulfide bond. Changes in response to disulfide formation have been studied by fluorescence- and CD spectroscopy, and biochemical approaches. Cysteins, involved in disulfide bridges, were analyzed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Finally, the solution structure of subunit d will be discussed in terms of the topological arrangement of the V1VO ATPase.  相似文献   

5.
The vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase) is a multisubunit complex that carries out ATP-driven proton transport. It is composed of a peripheral V1 domain that hydrolyzes ATP and an integral V0 domain that translocates protons. Subunit a is a 100-kDa integral membrane protein (part of V0) that possesses an N-terminal cytoplasmic domain and a C-terminal hydrophobic domain. Although the C-terminal domain functions in proton transport, the N-terminal domain is critical for intracellular targeting and regulation of V-ATPase assembly. Despite its importance, there is currently no high resolution structure for subunit a of the V-ATPase. Recently, the crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of the related subunit I from the archaebacterium Meiothermus ruber was reported. We have used homology modeling to construct a model of the N-terminal domain of Vph1p, one of two isoforms of subunit a expressed in yeast. To test this model, unique cysteine residues were introduced into a Cys-less form of Vph1p and their accessibility to modification by the sulfhydryl reagent 3-(N-maleimido-propionyl) biocytin (MPB) was determined. In addition, accessibility of introduced cysteine residues to MPB modification was compared in the V1V0 complex and the free V0 domain to identify residues protected from modification by the presence of V1. The results provide an experimental test of the proposed model and have identified regions of the N-terminal domain of subunit a that likely serve as interfacial contact sites with the peripheral V1 domain. The possible significance of these results for in vivo regulation of V-ATPase assembly is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian vacuolar-type proton pumping ATPases (V-ATPases) are diverse multi-subunit proton pumps. They are formed from membrane Vo and catalytic V1 sectors, whose subunits have cell-specific or ubiquitous isoforms. Biochemical study of a unique V-ATPase is difficult because ones with different isoforms are present in the same cell. However, the properties of mouse isoforms can be studied using hybrid V-ATPases formed from the isoforms and other yeast subunits. As shown previously, mouse subunit E isoform E1 (testis-specific) or E2 (ubiquitous) can form active V-ATPases with other subunits of yeast, but E1/yeast hybrid V-ATPase is defective in proton transport at 37 °C (Sun-Wada, G.-H., Imai-Senga, Y., Yamamoto, A., Murata, Y., Hirata, T., Wada, Y., and Futai, M., 2002, J. Biol. Chem. 277, 18098-18105). In this study, we have analyzed the properties of E1/yeast hybrid V-ATPase to understand the role of the E subunit. The proton transport by the defective hybrid ATPase was reversibly recovered when incubation temperature of vacuoles or cells was shifted to 30 °C. Corresponding to the reversible defect of the hybrid V-ATPase, the Vo subunit a epitope was exposed to the corresponding antibody at 37 °C, but became inaccessible at 30 °C. However, the V1 sector was still associated with Vo at 37 °C, as shown immunochemically. The control yeast V-ATPase was active at 37 °C, and its epitope was not accessible to the antibody. Glucose depletion, known to dissociate V1 from Vo in yeast, had only a slight effect on the hybrid at acidic pH. The domain between Lys26 and Val83 of E1, which contains eight residues not conserved between E1 and E2, was responsible for the unique properties of the hybrid. These results suggest that subunit E, especially its amino-terminal domain, plays a pertinent role in the assembly of V-ATPase subunits in vacuolar membranes.  相似文献   

7.
The vacuolar (H+)-ATPase: subunit arrangement and in vivo regulation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The V-ATPases are responsible for acidification of intracellular compartments and proton transport across the plasma membrane. They play an important role in both normal processes, such as membrane traffic, protein degradation, urinary acidification, and bone resorption, as well as various disease processes, such as viral infection, toxin killing, osteoporosis, and tumor metastasis. V-ATPases contain a peripheral domain (V1) that carries out ATP hydrolysis and an integral domain (V0) responsible for proton transport. V-ATPases operate by a rotary mechanism involving both a central rotary stalk and a peripheral stalk that serves as a stator. Cysteine-mediated cross-linking has been used to localize subunits within the V-ATPase complex and to investigate the helical interactions between subunits within the integral V0 domain. An essential property of the V-ATPases is the ability to regulate their activity in vivo. An important mechanism of regulating V-ATPase activity is reversible dissociation of the complex into its component V1 and V0 domains. The dependence of reversible dissociation on subunit isoforms and cellular environment has been investigated. Qi and Wang contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

8.
V-ATPases are conserved ATP-driven proton pumps that acidify organelles. Yeast V-ATPase assembly and activity are glucose-dependent. Glucose depletion causes V-ATPase disassembly and its inactivation. Glucose readdition triggers reassembly and resumes proton transport and organelle acidification. We investigated the roles of the yeast phosphofructokinase-1 subunits Pfk1p and Pfk2p for V-ATPase function. The pfk1Δ and pfk2Δ mutants grew on glucose and assembled wild-type levels of V-ATPase pumps at the membrane. Both phosphofructokinase-1 subunits co-immunoprecipitated with V-ATPase in wild-type cells; upon deletion of one subunit, the other subunit retained binding to V-ATPase. The pfk2Δ cells exhibited a partial vma growth phenotype. In vitro ATP hydrolysis and proton transport were reduced by 35% in pfk2Δ membrane fractions; they were normal in pfk1Δ. In vivo, the pfk1Δ and pfk2Δ vacuoles were alkalinized and the cytosol acidified, suggestive of impaired V-ATPase proton transport. Overall the pH alterations were more dramatic in pfk2Δ than pfk1Δ at steady state and after readdition of glucose to glucose-deprived cells. Glucose-dependent reassembly was 50% reduced in pfk2Δ, and the vacuolar lumen was not acidified after reassembly. RAVE-assisted glucose-dependent reassembly and/or glucose signals were disturbed in pfk2Δ. Binding of disassembled V-ATPase (V1 domain) to its assembly factor RAVE (subunit Rav1p) was 5-fold enhanced, indicating that Pfk2p is necessary for V-ATPase regulation by glucose. Because Pfk1p and Pfk2p are necessary for V-ATPase proton transport at the vacuole in vivo, a role for glycolysis at regulating V-ATPase proton transport is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The G subunit of V-ATPases is a soluble subunit that shows homology with the b subunit of F-ATPases and may be part of the "stator" stalk connecting the peripheral V(1) and membrane V(0) sectors. When the N-terminal half of the G subunit is modeled as an alpha helix, most of the conserved residues fall on one face of the helix (Hunt, I. E., and Bowman, B. J. (1997) J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 29, 533-540). We probed the function of this region by site-directed mutagenesis of the yeast VMA10 gene. Stable G subunits were produced in the presence of Y46A and K55A mutations, but subunit E was destabilized, resulting in loss of the V-ATPase assembly. Mutations E14A and K50A allowed wild-type growth and assembly of V-ATPase complexes, but the complexes formed were unstable. Mutations R25A and R25L stabilized V-ATPase complexes relative to wild-type and partially inhibited disassembly of V(1) from V(0) in response to glucose deprivation even though the mutant enzymes were fully active. A 2-amino acid deletion in the middle of the predicted N-terminal helix (DeltaQ29D30) allowed assembly of a functional V-ATPase. The results indicate that, although the N-terminal half of the G subunit is essential for V-ATPase activity, either this region is not a rigid helix or the presence of a continuous, conserved face of the helix is not essential.  相似文献   

10.
The model plant tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) was chosen for a survey of the subunit composition of the V-ATPase at the protein level. V-ATPase was purified from tobacco leaf cell tonoplasts by solubilization with the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 and immunoprecipitation. In the purified fraction 12 proteins were present. By matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) and amino acid sequencing 11 of these polypeptides could be identified as subunits A, B, C, D, F, G, c, d and three different isoforms of subunit E. The polypeptide which could not be identified by MALDI analysis might represent subunit H. The data presented here, for the first time, enable an unequivocal identification of V-ATPase subunits after gel electrophoresis and open the possibility to assign changes in polypeptide composition to variations in respective V-ATPase subunits occurring as a response to environmental conditions or during plant development.  相似文献   

11.
Shovanlal Gayen 《FEBS letters》2010,584(4):713-718
The C-terminal residues 98-104 are important for structure stability of subunit H of A1AO ATP synthases as well as its interaction with subunit A. Here we determined the structure of the segment H85-104 of H from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii, showing a helix between residues Lys90 to Glu100 and flexible tails at both ends. The helix-helix arrangement in the C-terminus was investigated by exchange of hydrophobic residues to single cysteine in mutants of the entire subunit H (HI93C, HL96C and HL98C). Together with the surface charge distribution of H85-104, these results shine light into the A-H assembly of this enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Youg R. Thaker  Yin H. Yau 《FEBS letters》2009,583(7):1090-1095
Owing to the complex nature of V1VO ATPases, identification of neighboring subunits is essential for mechanistic understanding of this enzyme. Here, we describe the links between the V1 headpiece and the VO-domain of the yeast V1VO ATPase via subunit A and d as well as the VO subunits a and d using surface plasmon resonance and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Binding constants of about 60 and 200 nM have been determined for the a-d and d-A assembly, respectively. The data are discussed in light of subunit a and d forming a peripheral stalk, connecting the catalytic A3B3 hexamer with VO.

Structured summary

MINT-7012054: d (uniprotkb:P32366) binds (MI:0407) to A (uniprotkb:P17255) by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (MI:0052)MINT-7012041: d (uniprotkb:P32366) binds (MI:0407) to A (uniprotkb:P17255) by surface plasmon resonance (MI:0107)MINT-7012028: d (uniprotkb:P32366) binds (MI:0407) to a (uniprotkb:P32563) by surface plasmon resonance (MI:0107)  相似文献   

13.
The yeast cytochrome bc1 complex, a component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, is composed of ten distinct protein subunits. In the assembly of the bc1 complex, some ancillary proteins, such as the chaperone Bcs1p, are actively involved. The deletion of the nuclear gene encoding this chaperone caused the arrest of the bc1 assembly and the formation of a functionally inactive bc1 core structure of about 500-kDa. This immature bc1 core structure could represent, on the one hand, a true assembly intermediate or, on the other hand, a degradation product and/or an incorrect product of assembly. The experiments here reported show that the gradual expression of Bcs1p in the yeast strain lacking this protein was progressively able to rescue the bc1 core structure leading to the formation of the functional homodimeric bc1 complex. Following Bcs1p expression, the mature bc1 complex was also progressively converted into two supercomplexes with the cytochrome c oxidase complex. The capability of restoring the bc1 complex and the supercomplexes was also possessed by the mutated yeast R81C Bcsp1. Notably, in the human ortholog BCS1L, the corresponding point mutation (R45C) was instead the cause of a severe bc1 complex deficiency. Differently from the yeast R81C Bcs1p, two other mutated Bcs1p's (K192P and F401I) were unable to recover the bc1 core structure in yeast. This study identifies for the first time a productive assembly intermediate of the yeast bc1 complex and gives new insights into the molecular mechanisms involved in the last steps of bc1 assembly.  相似文献   

14.
The RAVE complex (regulator of the H+-ATPase of vacuolar and endosomal membranes) is required for biosynthetic assembly and glucose-stimulated reassembly of the yeast vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase). Yeast RAVE contains three subunits: Rav1, Rav2, and Skp1. Rav1 is the largest subunit, and it binds Rav2 and Skp1 of RAVE; the E, G, and C subunits of the V-ATPase peripheral V1 sector; and Vph1 of the membrane Vo sector. We identified Rav1 regions required for interaction with its binding partners through deletion analysis, co-immunoprecipitation, two-hybrid assay, and pulldown assays with expressed proteins. We find that Skp1 binding requires sequences near the C terminus of Rav1, V1 subunits E and C bind to a conserved region in the C-terminal half of Rav1, and the cytosolic domain of Vph1 binds near the junction of the Rav1 N- and C-terminal halves. In contrast, Rav2 binds to the N-terminal domain of Rav1, which can be modeled as a double β-propeller. Only the V1 C subunit binds to both Rav1 and Rav2. Using GFP-tagged RAVE subunits in vivo, we demonstrate glucose-dependent association of RAVE with the vacuolar membrane, consistent with its role in glucose-dependent V-ATPase assembly. It is known that V1 subunit C localizes to the V1-Vo interface in assembled V-ATPase complexes and is important in regulated disassembly of V-ATPases. We propose that RAVE cycles between cytosol and vacuolar membrane in a glucose-dependent manner, positioning V1 and V0 subcomplexes and orienting the V1 C subunit to promote assembly.  相似文献   

15.
A series of truncated forms of subunit H were generated to establish the domain features of that protein. Circular dichroism analysis demonstrated that H is divided at least into a C-terminal coiled-coil domain within residues 54-104, and an N-terminal domain formed by adjacent α-helices. With a cysteine at the C-terminus of each of the truncated proteins (H1-47, H1-54, H1-59, H1-61, H1-67, H1-69, H1-71, H1-78, H1-80, H1-91, and H47-105), the residues involved in formation of the coiled-coil interface were determined. Proteins H1-54, H1-61, H1-69, and H1-80 showed strong cross-link formation, which was weaker in H1-47, H1-59, H1-71, and H1-91. A shift in disulfide formation between cysteins at positions 71 and 80 reflected an interruption in the periodicity of hydrophobic residues in the region 71AEKILEETEKE81. To understand how the N-terminal domain of H is formed, we determined for the first time, to our knowledge, the solution NMR structure of H1-47, which revealed an α-helix between residues 15-42 and a flexible N-terminal stretch. The α-helix includes a kink that would bring the two helices of the C-terminus into the coiled-coil arrangement. H1-47 revealed a strip of alanines involved in dimerization, which were tested by exchange to single cysteines in subunit H mutants.  相似文献   

16.
Vma5p (subunit C) of the yeast V-ATPase was produced in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Analysis of secondary structure by circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that Vma5p comprises 64% -helix and 17% β-sheet content. The molecular mass of this subunit, determined by gel filtration analysis and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), was approximately 51 ± 4 kDa, indicating a high hydration level of the protein in solution. The radius of gyration and the maximum size of Vma5p were determined to be 3.74 ± 0.03 and 12.5 ± 0.1 nm, respectively. Using two independent ab initio approaches, the first low-resolution shape of the protein was determined. Vma5p is an elongated boot-shaped particle consisting of two distinct domains. Co-reconstitution of Vma5p to V1 without C from Manduca sexta resulted in a V1–Vma5p hybrid complex and a 20% increase in ATPase hydrolysis activity.  相似文献   

17.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae vacuolar proton-translocating ATPase (V-ATPase) is composed of 14 subunits distributed between a peripheral V1 subcomplex and an integral membrane V0 subcomplex. Genome-wide screens have led to the identification of the newest yeast V-ATPase subunit, Vma9p. Vma9p (subunit e) is a small hydrophobic protein that is conserved from fungi to animals. We demonstrate that disruption of yeast VMA9 results in the failure of V1 and V0 V-ATPase subunits to assemble onto the vacuole and in decreased levels of the subunit a isoforms Vph1p and Stv1p. We also show that Vma9p is an integral membrane protein, synthesized and inserted into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which then localizes to the limiting membrane of the vacuole. All V0 subunits and V-ATPase assembly factors are required for Vma9p to efficiently exit the ER. In the ER, Vma9p and the V0 subunits interact with the V-ATPase assembly factor Vma21p. Interestingly, the association of Vma9p with the V0-Vma21p assembly complex is disrupted with the loss of any single V0 subunit. Similarly, Vma9p is required for V0 subunits Vph1p and Vma6p to associate with the V0-Vma21p complex. In contrast, the proteolipids associate with Vma21p even in the absence of Vma9p. These results demonstrate that Vma9p is an integral membrane subunit of the yeast V-ATPase V0 subcomplex and suggest a model for the arrangement of polypeptides within the V0 subcomplex.  相似文献   

18.
The insertion of inner membrane proteins in Escherichia coli occurs almost exclusively via the SecYEG pathway, while some membrane proteins require the membrane protein insertase YidC. In vitro analysis demonstrates that subunit a of the F1F0 ATP synthase (F0a) is strictly dependent on Ffh, SecYEG and YidC for its membrane insertion but independent of the proton motive force. The insertion of the first transmembrane segment of F0a also depends on Ffh and SecYEG but not on YidC, whereas the insertion is strongly dependent on the proton motive force, unlike the full-length F0a protein. These data demonstrate an extensive role of YidC in the assembly of the F0 sector of the F1F0 ATP synthase.  相似文献   

19.
Vacuolar (H+)-ATPase (V-ATPase) is a proton pump present in several compartments of eukaryotic cells to regulate physiological processes. From biochemical studies it is known that the interaction between arginine 735 present in the seventh transmembrane (TM7) segment from subunit a and specific glutamic acid residues in the subunit c assembly plays an essential role in proton translocation. To provide more detailed structural information about this protein domain, a peptide resembling TM7 (denoted peptide MTM7) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) V-ATPase was synthesized and dissolved in two membrane-mimicking solvents: DMSO and SDS. For the first time the secondary structure of the putative TM7 segment from subunit a is obtained by the combined use of CD and NMR spectroscopy. SDS micelles reveal an α-helical conformation for peptide MTM7 and in DMSO three α-helical regions are identified by 2D 1H-NMR. Based on these conformational findings a new structural model is proposed for the putative TM7 in its natural environment. It is composed of 32 amino acid residues that span the membrane in an α-helical conformation. It starts at the cytoplasmic side at residue T719 and ends at the luminal side at residue W751. Both the luminal and cytoplasmatic regions of TM7 are stabilized by the neighboring hydrophobic transmembrane segments of subunit a and the subunit c assembly from V-ATPase.  相似文献   

20.
At the present, no secreted phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) from soybean (Glycine max) was investigated in detail. In this work we identified five sequences of putative secreted sPLA2 from soybean after a BLAST search in G. max database. Sequence analysis showed a conserved PA2c domain bearing the Ca2+ binding loop and the active site motif. All the five mature proteins contain 12 cysteine residues, which are commonly conserved in plant sPLA2s. We propose a phylogenetic tree based on sequence alignment of reported plant sPLA2s including the novel enzymes from G. max. According to PLA2 superfamily, two of G. max sPLA2s are grouped as XIA and the rest of sequences as XIB, on the basis of differences found in their molecular weights and deviating sequences especially in the N- and C-terminal regions of the isoenzymes. Furthermore, we report the cloning, expression and purification of one of the putative isoenzyme denoted as GmsPLA2-XIA-1. We demonstrate that this mature sPLA2 of 114 residues had PLA2 activity on Triton:phospholipid mixed micelles and determine the kinetic parameters for this system. We generate a model based on the known crystal structure of sPLA2 from rice (isoform II), giving first insights into the three-dimensional structure of folded GmsPLA2-XIA-1. Besides describing the spatial arrangement of highly conserved pair HIS-49/ASP-50 and the Ca+2 loop domains, we propose the putative amino acids involved in the interfacial recognition surface. Additionally, molecular dynamics simulations indicate that calcium ion, besides its key function in the catalytic cycle, plays an important role in the overall stability of GmsPLA2-XIA-1 structure.  相似文献   

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