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1.
Corvest V  Sigalat C  Haraux F 《Biochemistry》2007,46(29):8680-8688
The mechanism of yeast mitochondrial F1-ATPase inhibition by its regulatory peptide IF1 was investigated with the noncatalytic sites frozen by pyrophosphate pretreatment that mimics filling by ATP. This allowed for confirmation of the mismatch between catalytic site occupancy and IF1 binding rate without the kinetic restriction due to slow ATP binding to the noncatalytic sites. These data strengthen the previously proposed two-step mechanism, where IF1 loose binding is determined by the catalytic state and IF1 locking is turnover-dependent and competes with IF1 release (Corvest, V., Sigalat, C., Venard, R., Falson, P., Mueller, D. M., and Haraux, F. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 9927-9936). They also demonstrate that noncatalytic sites, which slightly modulate IF1 access to the enzyme, play a minor role in its binding. It is also shown that loose binding of IF1 to MgADP-loaded F1-ATPase is very slow and that IF1 binding to ATP-hydrolyzing F1-ATPase decreases nucleotide binding severely in the micromolar range and moderately in the submillimolar range. Taken together, these observations suggest an outline of the total inhibition process. During the first catalytic cycle, IF1 loosely binds to a catalytic site with newly bound ATP and is locked when ATP is hydrolyzed at a second site. During the second cycle, blocking of ATP hydrolysis by IF1 inhibits ATP from becoming entrapped on the third site and, at high ATP concentrations, also inhibits ADP release from the second site. This model also provides a clue for understanding why IF1 does not bind ATP synthase during ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
M B Murataliev 《Biochemistry》1992,31(51):12885-12892
The evidence is presented that the ADP- and Mg(2+)-dependent inactivation of MF1-ATPase during MgATP hydrolysis requires binding of ATP at two binding sites: one is catalytic and the second is noncatalytic. Binding of the noncatalytic ATP increases the rate of the inactive complex formation in the course of ATP hydrolysis. The rate of the enzyme inactivation during ATP hydrolysis depends on the medium Mg2+ concentration. High Mg2+ inhibits the steady-state activity of MF1-ATPase by increasing the rate of formation of inactive enzyme-ADP-Mg2+ complex, thereby shifting the equilibrium between active and inactive enzyme forms. The Mg2+ needed for MF1-ATPase inactivation binds from the medium independent from the MgATP binding at either catalytic or noncatalytic sites. The inhibitory ADP molecule arises at the MF1-ATPase catalytic site as a result of MgATP hydrolysis. Exposure of the native MF1-ATPase with bound ADP at a catalytic site to 1 mM Mg2+ prior to assay inactivates the enzymes with kinact 24 min-1. The maximal inactivation rate during ATP hydrolysis at saturating MgATP and Mg2+ does not exceed 10 min-1. The results show that the rate-limiting step of the MF1-ATPase inactivation during ATP hydrolysis with excess Mg2+ precedes binding of Mg2+ and likely is the rate of formation of enzyme with ADP bound at the catalytic site without bound P(i). This complex binds Mg2+ resulting in inactive MF1-ATPase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The influence of the epsilon-subunit on the nucleotide binding affinities of the three catalytic sites of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase was investigated, using a genetically engineered Trp probe in the adenine-binding subdomain (beta-Trp-331). The interaction between epsilon and F1 was not affected by the mutation. Kd for binding of epsilon to betaY331W mutant F1 was approximately 1 nM, and epsilon inhibited ATPase activity by 90%. The only nucleotide binding affinities that showed significant differences in the epsilon-depleted and epsilon-replete forms of the enzyme were those for MgATP and MgADP at the high-affinity catalytic site 1. Kd1(MgATP) and Kd1(MgADP) were an order of magnitude higher in the absence of epsilon than in its presence. In contrast, the binding affinities for MgATP and MgADP at sites 2 and 3 were similar in the epsilon-depleted and epsilon-replete enzymes, as were the affinities at all three sites for free ATP and ADP. Comparison of MgATP binding and hydrolysis parameters showed that in the presence as well as the absence of epsilon, Km equals Kd3. Thus, in both cases, all three catalytic binding sites have to be occupied to obtain rapid (Vmax) MgATP hydrolysis rates.  相似文献   

4.
The substrate kinetics and the role of free Mg(2+) and free ATP were studied in membrane-bound F(1)-ATPase from crayfish (Orconectes virilis) gills. It was shown that the MgATP complex was the true substrate for the ATPase activity with a K(m) value of 0.327 mM. In the absence of bicarbonate, the maximum azide-sensitive activities in the presence and absence (<18 microM) of free ATP were 0.878 and 0.520 micromol P(i)/mg protein/min, respectively, while the maximum bicarbonate-stimulated activity in absence of free ATP was 1.486 micromol P(i)/mg protein/min. Free ATP was a competitive inhibitor (K(i)=0.77 mM) and free Mg(2+) was a mixed inhibitor (K(i)=0.81 mM, K(i)'=5.89 mM). However, free ATP also acted as an activator. Lineweaver-Burk plots for MgATP hydrolysis at high free Mg(2+) concentrations exhibited an apparent negative cooperativity, which was not the case for high free ATP levels. These results suggest that, although free ATP inhibited the enzyme by binding to catalytic sites, it stimulated ATPase activity by binding to non-catalytic sites and promoted the dissociation of inhibitory MgADP from the catalytic site.  相似文献   

5.
Although the binding of nucleotides at the noncatalytic sites of F1-ATPase has been regarded as probably having some type of regulatory function, only limited observations have been reported that support such a role. We present here results showing that the presence of ATP at noncatalytic sites can give a fivefold enhancement of the rate of GTP hydrolysis by the chloroplast F1-ATPase. Heat-activation of the chloroplast F1-ATPase in the presence of ATP, followed by column separation from the medium nucleotides gives an enzyme with two of the three noncatalytic sites filled with ATP. In contrast, heat-activation in the presence of ADP gives an enzyme with only one noncatalytic site filled with ADP. Such an enzyme with two noncatalytic sites empty catalyzes MgGTP hydrolysis only very slowly. The filling of a second noncatalytic site with ATP by exposure of the enzyme to ATP without Mg2+ present, followed by column separation, markedly increases the rate of GTP hydrolysis. A further increase occurs when a third noncatalytic site is filled by exposure to Mg2+ and ATP. The rate of MgATP hydrolysis is the same for the enzyme heat-activated in the presence of ATP or ADP, probably because MgATP, unlike MgGTP, rapidly binds to both catalytic and noncatalytic sites.  相似文献   

6.
To test the hypothesis that Na+/K+-ATPase works as an (alpha beta)2-diprotomer with interacting catalytic alpha-subunits, tryptic digestion of pig kidney enzyme, that had been inactivated with substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues, was performed. This led to the demonstration of coexisting C-terminal Na+-like 80-kDa as well as K+-like 60-kDa peptides and N-terminal 40-kDa peptides of the alpha-subunit. To localize the ATP binding sites on tryptic peptides, studies with radioactive MgATP complex analogues were performed: Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP specifically modified the E2ATP (low affinity) binding site of Na+/K+-ATPase with an inactivation rate constant (k2) of 12 x 10-3.min-1 at 37 degrees C and a dissociation constant (Kd) of 207 +/- 28 microm. Tryptic digestion of the [gamma32P]Co(NH3)4-8-N3-ATP-inactivated and photolabelled alpha-subunit (Mr = 100 kDa) led, in the absence of univalent cations, to a K+-like C-terminal 60-kDa fragment which was labelled in addition to an unlabelled Na+-like C-terminal 80-kDa fragment. Tryptic digestion of [alpha32P]-or [gamma32P]Cr(H2O)4ATP - bound to the E1ATP (high affinity) site - led to the labelling of a Na+-like 80-kDa fragment besides the immediate formation of an unlabelled K+-like N-terminal 40-kDa fragment and a C-terminal 60-kDa fragment. Because a labelled Na+-like 80-kDa fragment cannot result from an unlabelled K+-like 60-kDa fragment, and because unlabelled alpha-subunits did not show any catalytic activity, the findings are consistent with a situation in which Na+- and K+-like conformations are stabilized by tight binding of substitution-inert MgATP complex analogues to the E1ATP and E2ATP sites. Hence, all data are consistent with the hypothesis that ATP binding induces coexisting Na+ and K+ conformations within an (alphabeta)2-diprotomeric Na+/K+-ATPase.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of inhibition of yeast F(0)F(1)-ATPase by its naturally occurring protein inhibitor (IF1) was investigated in submitochondrial particles by studying the IF1-mediated ATPase inhibition in the presence and absence of a protonmotive force. In the presence of protonmotive force, IF1 added during net NTP hydrolysis almost completely inhibited NTPase activity. At moderate IF1 concentration, subsequent uncoupler addition unexpectedly caused a burst of NTP hydrolysis. We propose that the protonmotive force induces the conversion of IF1-inhibited F(0)F(1)-ATPase into a new form having a lower affinity for IF1. This form remains inactive for ATP hydrolysis after IF1 release. Uncoupling simultaneously releases ATP hydrolysis and converts the latent form of IF1-free F(0)F(1)-ATPase back to the active form. The relationship between the different steps of the catalytic cycle, the mechanism of inhibition by IF1 and the interconversion process is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of guanidinium chloride (GdnHCl) on the ATPase activity and structure of soluble mitochondrial F1 was studied. At high ATP concentrations, hydrolysis is carried by the three catalytic sites of F1; this reaction was strongly inhibited by GdnHCl concentrations of <50 mM. With substoichiometric ATP concentrations, hydrolysis is catalyzed exclusively by the site with the highest affinity. Under these conditions, ATP binding and hydrolysis took place with GdnHCl concentrations of >100 mM; albeit at the latter concentration, the rate of hydrolysis of bound ATP was lower. Similar results were obtained with urea, although nearly 10-fold higher concentrations were required to inhibit multisite hydrolysis. GdnHCl inhibited multisite ATPase activity by diminishing the V(max) of the reaction without significant alterations of the Km for MgATP. GdnHCl prevented the effect of excess ATP on hydrolysis of ATP that was already bound to the high-affinity catalytic site. With and without 100 mM GdnHCl and 100 microM [3H]ATP in the medium, F1 bound 1.6 and 2 adenine nucleotides per F1, respectively. The effect of GdnHCl on some structural features of F1 was also examined. GdnHCl at concentrations that inhibit multisite ATP hydrolysis did not affect the exposure of the cysteines of F1, nor its intrinsic fluorescence. With 100 mM GdnHCl, a concentration at which unisite ATP hydrolysis was still observed, 0.7 cysteine per F1 became solvent-exposed and small changes in its intrinsic fluorescence of F1 were detected. GdnHCl concentrations on the order of 500 mM were required to induce important decreases in intrinsic fluorescence. These changes accompanied inhibition of unisite ATP hydrolysis. The overall data indicate that increasing concentrations of GdnHCl bring about distinct and sequential alterations in the function and structure of F1. With respect to the function of F1, the results show that at low GdnHCl concentrations, only the high-affinity site expresses catalytic activity, and that inhibition of multisite catalysis is due to alterations in the transmission of events between catalytic sites.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
11.
In order to get insight into the origin of apparent negative cooperativity observed for F(1)-ATPase, we compared ATPase activity and ATPMg binding of mutant subcomplexes of thermophilic F(1)-ATPase, alpha((W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma and alpha((K175A/T176A/W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma. For alpha((W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma, apparent K(m)'s of ATPase kinetics (4.0 and 233 microM) did not agree with apparent K(m)'s deduced from fluorescence quenching of the introduced tryptophan residue (on the order of nM, 0.016 and 13 microM). On the other hand, in case of alpha((K175A/T176A/W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma, which lacks noncatalytic nucleotide binding sites, the apparent K(m) of ATPase activity (10 microM) roughly agreed with the highest K(m) of fluorescence measurements (27 microM). The results indicate that in case of alpha((W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma, the activating effect of ATP binding to noncatalytic sites dominates overall ATPase kinetics and the highest apparent K(m) of ATPase activity does not represent the ATP binding to a catalytic site. In case of alpha((K175A/T176A/W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma, the K(m) of ATPase activity reflects the ATP binding to a catalytic site due to the lack of noncatalytic sites. The Eadie-Hofstee plot of ATPase reaction by alpha((K175A/T176A/W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma was rather linear compared with that of alpha((W463F)3)beta((Y341W)3)gamma, if not perfectly straight, indicating that the apparent negative cooperativity observed for wild-type F(1)-ATPase is due to the ATP binding to catalytic sites and noncatalytic sites. Thus, the frequently observed K(m)'s of 100-300 microM and 1-30 microM range for wild-type F(1)-ATPase correspond to ATP binding to a noncatalytic site and catalytic site, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
The amino acid sequence -Gly-X-X-X-X-Gly-Lys- occurs in many, diverse, nucleotide-binding proteins, and there is evidence that it forms a flexible loop which interacts with one or other of the phosphate groups of bound nucleotide. This sequence occurs as -Gly-Gly-Ala-Gly-Val-Gly-Lys- in the beta-subunit of the enzyme F1-ATPase, where it is thought to form part of the catalytic nucleotide-binding domain. Mutants of Escherichia coli were generated in which residue beta-lysine 155, at the end of the above sequence, was replaced by glutamine or glutamate. Properties of the soluble purified F1-ATPase from each mutant were studied. The results showed: 1) replacement of lysine 155 by Gln or Glu decreased the steady-state rate of ATP hydrolysis by 80 and 66%, respectively. 2) Characteristics of ATP hydrolysis at a single site were not markedly changed in the mutant enzymes, implying that lysine 155 is not directly involved in bond cleavage during ATP hydrolysis or bond formation during ATP synthesis. 3) The binding affinity for MgATP was weakened considerably in the mutants (Lys much much greater than Gln greater than Glu), whereas the binding affinity for MgADP was affected only mildly (Lys = Gln greater than Glu), suggesting that lysine 155 interacts with the gamma-phosphate of ATP bound at a single high affinity catalytic site. 4) The major determinant of inhibition of steady-state ATPase turnover rate in the mutant enzymes was an attenuation of positive catalytic cooperativity. 5) The data are consistent with the idea that during multisite catalysis residue 155 of beta-subunit undergoes conformational movement which changes substrate and product binding affinities.  相似文献   

13.
Ren H  Bandyopadhyay S  Allison WS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(19):6222-6230
The alpha(3)(betaM(222)S/Y(345)W)(3)gamma double-mutant subcomplex of the F(1)-ATPase from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 (TF(1)), free of endogenous nucleotides, does not entrap inhibitory MgADP in a catalytic site during turnover. It hydrolyzes 100 nM-2 mM ATP with a K(m) of 31 microM and a k(cat) of 220 s(-)(1). Fluorescence titrations of the introduced tryptophans with MgADP or MgATP revealed that both Mg-nucleotide complexes bind to the catalytic site of the highest affinity with K(d)()1 values of less than 1 nM and bind to the site of intermediate affinity with a common K(d)2 value of about 12 nM. The K(d)3 values obtained for the catalytic site of the lowest affinity from titrations with MgADP and MgATP are 25 and 37 microM, respectively. The double mutant hydrolyzes 200 nM ATP with a first-order rate of 1.5 s(-)(1), which is 0.7% of k(cat). Hence, it does not hydrolyze ATP at a significant rate when the catalytic site of intermediate affinity is saturated and the catalytic site of the lowest affinity is minimally occupied. After the addition of stoichiometric MgATP to the alpha(3)(betaM(222)S/Y(345)W)(3)gamma subcomplex, one-third of the tryptophan fluorescence remains quenched after 10 min. The product [(3)H]ADP remains bound when the wild-type and double-mutant subcomplexes hydrolyze substoichiometric [(3)H]ATP. In contrast, (32)P(i) is not retained when the wild-type subcomplex hydrolyzes substoichiometric [gamma-(32)P]ATP. This precludes assessment of the equilibrium at the high-affinity catalytic site when the wild-type TF(1) subcomplex hydrolyzes substoichiometric ATP.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The Escherichia coli uncA gene codes for the alpha-subunit of the F1 sector of the membrane proton ATPase. In this work purified soluble F1 enzymes from three mutant strains ( uncA401 , uncA447 , and uncA453 ) have been compared to F1 from a normal strain in respect to (a) binding of 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) to native enzyme in both the presence and absence of Mg, (b) high-affinity binding of MgATP to native enzyme, (c) total reloading of MgAMPPNP to nucleotide-depleted F1 preparations, (d, e) ability to hydrolyze MgATP at both high MgATP concentrations (d) (steady-state conditions) and low MgATP concentrations (e) where substrate hydrolysis occurs under nonsteady-state (" unisite ") conditions, and (f) sensitivity of steady-state ATPase activities to inhibitors of normal F1-ATPase activity. uncA mutant F1 showed normal stoichiometry of MgAMPPNP binding to both native (three sites per F1) and nucleotide-depleted preparations (six sites per F1). Native uncA F1 preparations showed lower-than-normal affinity for MgAMPPNP and MgATP at the first site filled. Binding of AMPPNP in the absence of Mg was similar to normal, except that no increase in affinity for AMPPNP was induced by aurovertin. The uncA F1-ATPases had low but real steady-state rates of ATP hydrolysis, which were inhibited by aurovertin but relatively insensitive to inhibition by AMPPNP, efrapeptin, and sodium azide. Non-steady-state ( unisite ) ATP hydrolysis rates catalyzed at low substrate concentrations by uncA F1-ATPases were similar to normal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
ATP hydrolysis by F1-ATPase is strongly inhibited by cationic rhodamines; neutral rhodamines are very poor inhibitors. Rhodamine 6G is a noncompetitive inhibitor of purified F0F1-ATPase and submitochondrial particles, however, an uncompetitive inhibitor of F1-ATPase (KI approximately equal to 2.4 microM for all three enzyme forms). Ethidium bromide is a noncompetitive inhibitor of F0F1-ATPase, submitochondrial particles and also F1-ATPase (KI approximately equal to 270 microM). Neither of the inhibitors affects the negative cooperativity (nH approximately equal to 0.7). The non-identical binding sites for rhodamine 6G and ethidium bromide are located on the F1-moiety and are topologically distinct from the catalytic site. Binding of the inhibitors prevents the conformational changes essential for energy transduction. It is concluded that the inhibitor binding sites are involved in proton translocation. In F1-ATPase, binding of MgATP at a catalytic site causes conformational changes, which allosterically induce the correct structure of the rhodamine 6G binding site. In F0F1-ATPase, this conformation of the F1-moiety exists a priori, due to allosteric interactions with F0-subunits. The binding site for ethidium bromide on F1-ATPase does not require substrate binding at the catalytic site and is not affected by F0F1-subunit interactions.  相似文献   

17.
The F1 moiety of the rat liver mitochondrial ATP synthase/ATPase complex contains as isolated 2 mol Mg2+/mol F1, 1 mol of which is nonexchangeable and the other which is exchangeable (N. Williams, J. Hullihen, and P.L. Pedersen, (1987) Biochemistry 26, 162-169). In addition, the enzyme binds 1 mol ADP/mol F1 and 3 mol AMP.PNP, the latter of which can bind in complex formation with divalent cation and displace the Mg2+ at the exchangeable site. Thus, in terms of ligand binding sites the fully loaded rat liver F1 complex contains 3 mol MgAMP.PNP, 1 mol ADP, and 1 mol Mg2+. In this study we have used several metal ATP complexes or analogs thereof to gain further insight into the ligand binding domains of rat liver F1 and the mechanism by which it catalyzes ATP hydrolysis in soluble and membrane bound form. Studies with LaATP confirmed that MgATP is the most likely substrate for rat liver F1, and provided evidence that the enzyme may contain additional Mg2+ binding sites, undetected in previous studies of F1-ATPases, that are required for catalytic activity. Thus, F1 containing the thermodynamically stable LaATP complex in place of MgATP requires added Mg2+ to induce ATP hydrolysis. As Mg2+ cannot readily displace La2+ under these conditions there appears to be a catalytically important class of Mg2+ binding sites on rat liver F1, distinct from the nonexchangeable Mg2+ site and the sites involved in binding MgATP. Additional studies carried out with exchange inert metal-nucleotide complexes involving rhodium and the Mg2+ and Cd2+ complexes of ATP beta S and ATP alpha S imply that the rate-limiting step in the ATPase reaction pathway occurs subsequent to the P gamma-O-P beta bond cleavage steps, perhaps at the level of Mg(ADP)(Pi) hydrolysis or MgADP release. Evidence is presented that Mg2+ remains coordinated to the leaving group of the reaction, i.e., the beta phosphoryl group. Finally, in contrast to soluble F1, F1 bound to F0 in the inner mitochondrial membrane failed to discriminate between the Mg2+ complexes of the ATP beta S isomers. This indicates that a fundamental difference may exist between the catalytic or kinetic mechanism of F1 and the more physiologically intact F0F1 complex.  相似文献   

18.
The presence of ATP at non-catalytic sites of the chloroplast F1-ATPase (CF1) eliminates a considerable lag in onset of enzyme activity that otherwise occurs in the presence of bicarbonate [Milgrom, Y. M., Ehler, L. & Boyer, P. D. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 11551-11558]. Sulfite is known to be much more effective than bicarbonate in stimulating ATPase activity CF1. Results reported here show that when assayed in the presence of sulfite, CF1, with some non-catalytic sites empty or filled with GT(D)P, is able to hydrolyze both ATP and GTP. Thus, the presence of adenine nucleotides at non-catalytic sites is not necessary for catalytic turnover of CF1. However, even though CF1 with empty non-catalytic sites shows a significant initial activity, the prior binding of adenine nucleotides at non-catalytic site(s) results in further activation of MgATPase and MgGTPase activities, even at relatively high sulfite and substrate concentrations. Although extensive activation of CF1 results from the presence of sulfite, with or without nucleotide binding at non-catalytic sites, the Km remains constant, at about 50 microM for MgATP and 400 microM for MgGTP. The results obtained show that the ATPase activity of CF1 is determined by the fraction of the active enzyme. The inactive CF1.ADP.Mg2+ formed during MgATP hydrolysis can be rapidly trapped by azide to provide a measure of the fraction of inactive enzyme. Increasing the concentration of sulfite increases the fraction of active CF1 in the assay medium. Measurements with radioactively labeled nucleotides show that the presence of ATP at non-catalytic sites promotes the ATP-dependent release of inhibitory ADP from a catalytic site. The activating effect of ATP binding at non-catalytic sites results from increasing the portion of CF1 in an active state during steady-state ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

19.
A monoclonal antibody, 7B3, specific to the alpha subunit of the mitochondrial ATPase-ATP synthase inhibited the rate of ATP hydrolysis by either soluble F1 or electron transport particles up to a maximum of 75%. However, 7B3 did not modify the rate of ITP hydrolysis. In addition, the apparent Km for MgATP extrapolated at high ATP concentrations had the same value in the absence as in the presence of 7B3. The antibody did not change the inactivation rate of F1-ATPase induced by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide or 4-chloro-7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole. These observations indicate that 7B3 did not directly interfere with the catalytic sites of ATP or ITP hydrolysis. On the contrary, 7B3 modified the interaction between nucleotide sites and therefore the regulation of the rate of ATP hydrolysis. Indeed, 7B3 changed into a positive cooperativity the negative cooperativity observed when measuring the rate of ATP hydrolysis as a function of ATP concentration. 7B3 also increased the binding of ADP to F1. 7B3 prevented the rapid phase of inactivation of F1 by 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine. This phase has been correlated to the binding of 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine to regulatory sites (Di Pietro, A., Godinot, C., Martin, J. C., and Gautheron, D. C. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 1738-1745). The inhibition of ATP hydrolysis is concomitant with the binding of 1 mol of IgG or of 2 mol of Fab fragments per mol of F1. However, by further increasing the ratio Fab/F1, only 1 mol of Fab remained bound to F1 without change in inhibition of ATPase activity. All these experiments strongly support the suggestion that F1 conformational changes occurring upon binding of 7B3 to alpha subunit induce a modification of interactions between nucleotide sites. This modification would be consecutive to a change in the normal interaction between the alpha and beta subunits which is required to observe an active rate of ATP hydrolysis or synthesis. In conclusion, the use of this monoclonal antibody demonstrates for the first time in mammalian F1 the role of the conformation of the alpha subunit in the regulation of the ATPase activity.  相似文献   

20.
Culturing of Trypanosoma cruzi in the presence of ethidium bromide (EB; 1.0-2.5 microM), for 5 days, affected the biogenesis of the Fo/F1-ATPase complex, presumably by EB interference with the expression of the putative Fo-sector subunits encoded by maxicircle DNA. In vitro, EB inhibited ATP hydrolysis by the Fo/F1-ATPase complex and also by soluble F1, the former preparation being the most strongly affected (EB I50, 250 microM). Analysis of EB effect at increasing MgATP concentrations, as well as combination of EB and p-chloromercuribenzoate inhibitions, indicated that the dye interacts with ATPase at sites other than the catalytic ones. No correlation was found between the in vitro inhibition of ATPase and EB effect on parasite growth.  相似文献   

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