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1.
In contrast to the homologous bacterial and mitochondrial enzymes the chloroplast F(1)-ATPase (CF(1)) is strongly affected by the phytopathogenic inhibitor tentoxin. Based on structural information obtained from crystals of a CF(1)-tentoxin co-complex (Groth, G. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99, 3464-3468) we have replaced residues betaSer(66) and alphaArg(132) in the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma subcomplex of the thermophilic F(1)-ATPase from Bacillus PS3 by the corresponding residues of the chloroplast ATPase to confer tentoxin sensitivity to the thermophilic enzyme. The mutation alphaArg(132) --> Pro, proposed to relieve steric constraints on tentoxin binding, did not have any significant effect. However, mutation betaSer(66) --> Ala, predicted to provide a crucial hydrogen bond with the inhibitor, resulted in tentoxin inhibition of ATP hydrolysis comparable with the situation found with the chloroplast enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism of inhibition and reactivation of chloroplast ATP-synthase by the fungal cyclotetrapeptide tentoxin was investigated by photolabeling experiments, binding studies, and kinetic analysis using synthetic analogues of tentoxin. The alpha-subunit of chloroplast F(1)-ATPase (CF(1)) was specifically labeled by a photoactivatable tentoxin derivative, providing the first direct evidence of tentoxin binding to the alpha-subunit, and 3D homology modeling was used to locate tentoxin in its putative binding site at the alpha/beta interface. The non-photosynthetic F(1)-ATPase from thermophilic bacterium (TF(1)) proved to be also tentoxin-sensitive, and enzyme turnover dramatically increased the rate of tentoxin binding to its inhibitory site, contrary to what was previously observed with epsilon-depleted CF(1) [Santolini, J., Haraux, F., Sigalat, C., Moal, G., and André, F. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 849-858]. We propose that tentoxin preferentially binds to an ADP-loaded alpha beta pair, and mechanically blocks the catalytic cycle, perhaps by the impossibility of converting this alpha beta pair into an ATP-loaded alpha beta pair. Using (14)C-tentoxin and selected synthetic analogues, we found that toxin binding to the tight inhibitory site of CF(1) exerts some cooperative effect on the loose reactivatory site, but that no reciprocal effect exists. When the two tentoxin-binding sites are filled in reactivated F(1)-ATPase, they do not exchange their role during catalytic turnover, indicating an impairment between nucleotide occupancy and the shape of tentoxin-binding pocket. This analysis provides a mechanical interpretation of the inhibition of F(1)-ATPase by tentoxin and a clue for understanding the reactivation process.  相似文献   

3.
F(1)-ATP synthase (F(1)-ATPase) is equipped with a special mechanism that prevents the wasteful reverse reaction, ATP hydrolysis, when there is insufficient proton motive force to drive ATP synthesis. Chloroplast F(1)-ATPase is subject to redox regulation, whereby ATP hydrolysis activity is regulated by formation and reduction of the disulfide bond located on the γ subunit. To understand the molecular mechanism of this redox regulation, we constructed a chimeric F(1) complex (α(3)β(3)γ(redox)) using cyanobacterial F(1), which mimics the regulatory properties of the chloroplast F(1)-ATPase, allowing the study of its regulation at the single molecule level. The redox state of the γ subunit did not affect the ATP binding rate to the catalytic site(s) and the torque for rotation. However, the long pauses caused by ADP inhibition were frequently observed in the oxidized state. In addition, the duration of continuous rotation was relatively shorter in the oxidized α(3)β(3)γ(redox) complex. These findings lead us to conclude that redox regulation of CF(1)-ATPase is achieved by controlling the probability of ADP inhibition via the γ subunit inserted region, a sequence feature observed in both cyanobacterial and chloroplast ATPase γ subunits, which is important for ADP inhibition (Sunamura, E., Konno, H., Imashimizu-Kobayashi, M., Sugano, Y., and Hisabori, T. (2010) Plant Cell Physiol. 51, 855-865).  相似文献   

4.
Using manual rapid-mixing procedures in which small, equal volumes of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase and [gamma-32P]ATP were combined at final concentrations of 2 and 0.2 microM, respectively (i.e., unisite catalysis conditions), it was shown that greater than or equal to 66% of the 32P became bound to the enzyme, with the ratio of bound ATP/bound Pi equal to 0.4 and the rate of dissociation of bound [32P]Pi equal to 3.5 x 10(-3) s-1, similar to previously published values. Azide is known to inhibit cooperative but not unisite catalysis in F1-ATPase [Noumi, T., Maeda, M., & Futai, M. (1987) FEBS Lett. 213, 381-384]. In the presence of 1 mM sodium azide, 99% of the 32P became bound to the enzyme, with the ratio of bound ATP/bound Pi being 0.57. These experiments demonstrated that when conditions are used which minimize cooperative catalysis, most or all of the F1 molecules bind substoichiometric ATP tightly, hydrolyze it with retention of bound ATP and Pi, and release the products slowly. The data justify the validity of previously published rate constants for unisite catalysis. Unisite catalysis in E. coli F1-ATPase was studied at varied pH from 5.5 to 9.5 using buffers devoid of phosphate. Rate constants for ATP binding/release, ATP hydrolysis/resynthesis, Pi release, and ADP binding/release were measured; the Pi binding rate constant was inferred from the delta G for ATP hydrolysis. ATP binding was pH-independent; ATP release accelerated at higher pH. The highest KaATP (4.4 x 10(9) M-1) was seen at physiological pH 7.5.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Since the report by Sternweis and Smith (Sternweis, P. C., and Smith, J. B. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 526-531), the epsilon subunit, an endogenous inhibitor of bacterial F(1)-ATPase, has long been thought not to inhibit activity of the holo-enzyme, F(0)F(1)-ATPase. However, we report here that the epsilon subunit is exerting inhibition in F(0)F(1)-ATPase. We prepared a C-terminal half-truncated epsilon subunit (epsilon(DeltaC)) of the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 F(0)F(1)-ATPase and reconstituted F(1)- and F(0)F(1)-ATPase containing epsilon(DeltaC). Compared with F(1)- and F(0)F(1)-ATPase containing intact epsilon, those containing epsilon(DeltaC) showed uninhibited activity; severalfold higher rate of ATP hydrolysis at low ATP concentration and the start of ATP hydrolysis without an initial lag at high ATP concentration. The F(0)F(1)-ATPase containing epsilon(DeltaC) was capable of ATP-driven H(+) pumping. The time-course of pumping at low ATP concentration was faster than that by the F(0)F(1)-ATPase containing intact epsilon. Thus, the comparison with noninhibitory epsilon(DeltaC) mutant shed light on the inhibitory role of the intact epsilon subunit in F(0)F(1)-ATPase.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
The physiological role of F(1)F(0)-ATPase inhibition in ischemia may be to retard ATP depletion although views of the significance of IF(1) are at variance. We corroborate here a method for measuring the ex vivo activity of F(1)F(0)-ATPase in perfused rat heart and show that observation of ischemic F(1)F(0)-ATPase inhibition in rat heart is critically dependent on the sample preparation and assay conditions, and that the methods can be applied to assay the ischemic and reperfused human heart during coronary by-pass surgery. A 5-min period of ischemia inhibited F(1)F(0)-ATPase by 20% in both rat and human myocardium. After a 15-min reperfusion a subsequent 5-min period of ischemia doubled the inhibition in the rat heart but this potentiation was lost after 120 min of reperfusion. Experiments with isolated rat heart mitochondria showed that ATP hydrolysis is required for effective inhibition by uncoupling. The concentration of oligomycin for 50% inhibition (I(50)) for oxygen consumption was five times higher than its I(50) for F(1)F(0)-ATPase. Because of the different control strengths of F(1)F(0)-ATPase in oxidative phosphorylation and ATP hydrolysis an inhibition of the F(1)F(0)-ATPase activity in ischemia with the resultant ATP-sparing has an advantage even in an ischemia/reperfusion situation.  相似文献   

9.
Citreoviridin is a toxic metabolite from fungus that has been shown to be an inhibitor of mitochondrial F1-ATPases. Studies of citreoviridin, however, have been compromised by the light-dependent isomerization that it undergoes. The isomerization is a potential source of extensive variability in the studies, if citreoviridin and isocitreoviridin have different kinetic effects and binding properties. Both citreoviridin and isocitreoviridin recently have been purified and have been shown to be stable in the dark. Using the purified isomers, the effects of both citreoviridin and isocitreoviridin on soluble and membrane-bound beef heart mitochondrial F1-ATPase activity were investigated. It was found that citreoviridin was an uncompetitive inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis, and a non-competitive inhibitor of ITP hydrolysis catalyzed by soluble F1-ATPase. Isocitreoviridin had no effect on the hydrolysis of either of the triphosphates catalyzed by soluble F1-ATPase. The inhibition constant, Ki for citreoviridin was determined as 4.5 microM for ATP hydrolysis. The inhibition constants Kii and Kis for ITP hydrolysis were determined as 4.3 and 1.03 microM, respectively. Citreoviridin was an uncompetitive inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis and a noncompetitive inhibitor of ATP synthesis catalyzed by membrane-bound F1-ATPase. The inhibition constant, Ki, for ATP hydrolysis was around 4 microM. For ATP synthesis the inhibition constants were determined as 0.12 and 0.16 microM for Kis and Kii, respectively, when ADP concentration was kept saturating. Isocitreoviridin had no effect on either activity of the membrane-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
A method is described for isolating the beta subunit from spinach chloroplast F1 (CF1). The isolated beta subunit reconstituted an active F1 hybrid with the F1 of Rhodospirillum rubrum chromatophores from which the beta subunit had been removed. The CF1 beta subunit was similar to the isolated beta subunit of Escherichia coli F1 (Gromet-Elhanan, Z., Khananshivili, D., Weiss, S., Kanazawa, H., and Futai, M. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12635-12640) in that it restored a substantial rate of ATP hydrolysis and low, but significant light-dependent ATP synthesis to the beta-less chromatophores. The low rate of photophosphorylation observed with the hybrid enzyme probably resulted from a looser coupling of the CF1 beta subunit to proton translocation in the R. rubrum Fo-F1 complex. The hybrid enzyme exhibited a high specificity for Mg2+-ATP as substrate for ATP hydrolysis and both ATP synthesis and hydrolysis were strongly inhibited by the antibiotic tentoxin. In contrast, chromatophores reconstituted with the native R. rubrum beta subunit actively hydrolyzed both Mg2+-ATP and Ca2+-ATP and were insensitive to tentoxin. These results indicate a close functional homology between the beta subunits of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic H+-ATPases and suggest a role for the beta subunit in conferring the different metal ion specificities and inhibitor sensitivities upon the enzymes. They also demonstrate the feasibility of isolating the beta subunit from CF1 in a reconstitutively active form.  相似文献   

11.
Mitochondrial F(1)F(0)-ATPase normally synthesizes ATP in the heart, but under ischemic conditions this enzyme paradoxically causes ATP hydrolysis. Nonselective inhibitors of this enzyme (aurovertin, oligomycin) inhibit ATP synthesis in normal tissue but also inhibit ATP hydrolysis in ischemic myocardium. We characterized the profile of aurovertin and oligomycin in ischemic and nonischemic rat myocardium and compared this with the profile of BMS-199264, which only inhibits F(1)F(0)-ATP hydrolase activity. In isolated rat hearts, aurovertin (1-10 microM) and oligomycin (10 microM), at concentrations inhibiting ATPase activity, reduced ATP concentration and contractile function in the nonischemic heart but significantly reduced the rate of ATP depletion during ischemia. They also inhibited recovery of reperfusion ATP and contractile function, consistent with nonselective F(1)F(0)-ATPase inhibitory activity, which suggests that upon reperfusion, the hydrolase activity switches back to ATP synthesis. BMS-199264 inhibits F(1)F(0) hydrolase activity in submitochondrial particles with no effect on ATP synthase activity. BMS-199264 (1-10 microM) conserved ATP in rat hearts during ischemia while having no effect on preischemic contractile function or ATP concentration. Reperfusion ATP levels were replenished faster and necrosis was reduced by BMS-199264. ATP hydrolase activity ex vivo was selectively inhibited by BMS-199264. Therefore, excessive ATP hydrolysis by F(1)F(0)-ATPase contributes to the decline in cardiac energy reserve during ischemia and selective inhibition of ATP hydrolase activity can protect ischemic myocardium.  相似文献   

12.
Substitution of critical residues in the alpha- and beta-subunit can turn the typically resistant ATP synthase from the bacterium Escherichia coli into an enzyme showing high sensitivity to the phytopathogenic inhibitor tentoxin, which usually affects only certain sensitive plant species. In contrast to recent results obtained with the thermophilic F(1) (Groth, G., Hisabori, T., Lill, H., and Bald, D. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 20117-20119), substitution of a critical serine in the beta-subunit (betaSer(59)), which is supposed to provide an important intermolecular hydrogen bond in the binding site, was not sufficient on its own for conferring tentoxin sensitivity to the E. coli F(1) complex. Superimposition of the chloroplast F(1)-tentoxin inhibitor complex on a homology model of the E. coli F(1) complex provided detailed information on the critical residues in the alpha-subunit of the binding cleft and allowed us to model the binding site according to the steric requirements of the inhibitor. Substitution of the highly conserved residue alphaLeu(64) seems to be most important for allowing access of the inhibitor to the binding site. Combining this substitution with either additional replacements in the alpha-subunit (Q49A, L95A, E96Q, I273M) or the replacement of Ser(59) in the beta-subunit enhanced the sensitivity to the inhibitor and resulted in a complete inhibition of the E. coli F(1)-ATPase by the plant-specific inhibitor tentoxin.  相似文献   

13.
The amount of F1-ATPase in chromatophores from Rhodospirillum rubrum was determined by Western blotting using anti-RrF1 rabbit antibodies. 9.1 mmol F1 (mol bacteriochlorophyll)-1 was obtained or 14% of the total protein content of the chromatophores. The turnover rate of the F0F1-ATPase was 17 molecules ATP s-1 during synthesis, 2 molecules ATP s-1 during hydrolysis under coupled conditions with Mg2+ as the divalent cation, and 7 molecules ATP s-1 during hydrolysis in the presence of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone. Binding of 1 mol oligomycin/mol F0F1-ATPase was found to inhibit the activities of the enzyme completely. A single binding site was found with a Kd of approximately 2 microM.  相似文献   

14.
Using a coupled transport assay which detects only those ATPase molecules functionally inserted into the platelet dense granule membrane, we have characterized the inhibitor sensitivity, substrate specificity, and divalent cation requirements of the granule H+ pump. Under identical assay conditions, the granule ATPase was insensitive to concentrations of NaN3, oligomycin, and efrapeptin which almost completely inhibit ATP hydrolysis by mitochondrial membranes. The granule ATPase was inhibited by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide but only at concentrations much higher than those needed to maximally inhibit mitochondrial ATPase. Vanadate (VO3-) ion and ouabain also failed to inhibit granule ATPase activity at concentrations which maximally inhibited purified Na+,K+-ATPase. Two alkylating agents, 7-chloro-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and N-ethylmaleimide both completely inhibited H+ pumping by the granule ATPase under conditions where ATP hydrolysis by mitochondrial membranes or Na+,K+-ATPase was hardly affected. These results suggest that the H+-pumping ATPase of platelet granule membrane may belong to a class of ion-translocating ATPases distinct from both the phosphoenzyme-type ATPases present in plasma membrane and the F1F0-ATPases of energy-transducing membranes.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrolysis of ATP, ADP or GTP was characterized in mitochondria and submitochondrial particles since a tightly-bound ATPase associated with the inner mitochondrial membrane from the human placenta has been described. Submitochondrial particles, which are basically inner membranes, were used to define the location of this enzyme. Mitochondria treated with trypsin and specific inhibitors were also used. The oxygen consumption stimulated by ATP or ADP was 100% inhibited in intact mitochondria by low concentrations of oligomycin (0.5 microgram/mg) or venturicidine (0.1 microgram/mg), while the hydrolysis of ATP or ADP was insensitive to higher concentrations of these inhibitors but it was inhibited by vanadate. Oligomycin or venturicidine showed a different inhibition pattern in intact mitochondria in relation to the hydrolysis of ATP, ADP or GTP. When submitochondrial particles were isolated from mitochondria incubated with oligomycin or venturicidine, no further inhibition of the nucleotide hydrolysis was observed, contrasting with the partial inhibition observed in the control. By incubating the placental mitochondria with trypsin, a large fraction of the hydrolysis of nucleotides was eliminated. In submitochondrial particles obtained from mitochondria treated with trypsin or trypsin plus oligomycin, the hydrolysis of ATP was 100% sensitive to oligomycin at low concentrations, resembling the oxygen consumption; however, this preparation still showed some ADP hydrolysis. Native gel electrophoresis showed two bands hydrolyzing ADP, suggesting at least two enzymes involved in the hydrolysis of nucleotides, besides the F1F0-ATPase. It is concluded that human placental mitochondria possesses ADPase and ATP-diphosphohydrolase activities (247).  相似文献   

16.
(1) Mitochondrial ATPase (F1) is influenced by specific nucleotides in its kinetic behavior towards its substrates. In this work, initial hydrolysis rates, as well as continuous reaction progress, were measured by recording proton production (equivalent to triphosphate hydrolysis). (2) After preincubation with ATP, F1 hydrolyzes MgITP partly as if it were MgATP, with respect to temperature dependence and 2,4-dinitrophenol inhibition/stimulation. (3) Acetyl ATP is a competitive inhibitor versus ATP on the F1-ATPase. With F1 which has been freed of ambient ATP by repeated precipitations with ammonium sulfate the Ki of acetyl ATP is 400 nM. (4) F1-ATPase which was depleted of bound nucleotides in the presence of glycerol (Garret, N.E. and Penefsky, H.S. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 6640-6647) was preincubated with ADP and acetyl ATP. These preparations were assayed for hydrolytic activity with MgITP as substrate. Compared to a nonpreincubated control enzyme, the hydrolysis with these preparations was first stimulated, then inhibited. This stimulation/inhibition effect is most pronounced at 10 degrees C, but is also observed at 20 degrees C. (5) When nucleotide-depleted enzyme is preincubated with acetyl AMP, its ability to hydrolyze MgITP slowly decreases to approx. 50% after 60 min. This effect is reversed by further preincubation with acetyl ATP. It is speculated that under appropriate conditions AMP may exist or arise in a buried position on F1-ATPase, and act there as an inhibitor of MgITP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial H+-ATPase activation by an amine oxide detergent   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Lauryl dimethylamine oxide activates ATP hydrolysis by the mitochondrial H+-ATPase. Activation is observed in systems with a high content of inhibitor protein as described by Pullman and Monroy (Pullman, M.E., and Monroy, G.C. (1963) J. Biol. Chem. 238, 3762-3769), i.e. Mg-ATP submitochondrial particles and a Triton X-100-solubilized H+-ATPase from the same particles. Detergent activation of ATP hydrolysis is also present in inhibitor-reconstituted systems, i.e. submitochondrial particles, Triton extracts, and soluble F1-ATPase. In submitochondrial particles depleted of inhibitor protein, lauryl dimethylamine oxide induced a biphasic response which is characterized by a drop-in activity induced by relatively low concentrations of LDAO; at higher concentrations the detergent activates to an extent never greater than the initial activity. In inhibitor protein-depleted oligomycin-sensitive Triton extracts, lauryl dimethylamine oxide stimulates ATP hydrolysis to very high values (30 mumol min-1 mg-1). These findings suggest that in addition to the inhibitor protein ATP hydrolysis is controlled by other subunit interactions.  相似文献   

18.
The F1 part of the chloroplast H+ adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-synthase (CF1) strongly interacts with tentoxin, a natural fungous cyclic tetrapeptide known to inhibit the chloroplast enzyme and not the mammalian mitochondrial enzyme. Whereas the synthesis or the hydrolysis of ATP requires the stepwise rotation of the protein rotor gamma within the (alphabeta)3 crown, only one molecule of tentoxin is needed to fully inhibit the complex. With the help of an original homology modeling technique, based on robust distance geometry protocols, we built a tridimensional model of the alpha3beta3gamma CF1) subcomplex (3200 esidues), in which we introduced three different nucleotide occupancies to check their possible influence on the tentoxin binding site. Simultaneous comparison of three available high-resolution X-ray structures of F1, performed with a local structural alignment search tool, led to characterizing common structural blocks and the distorsions experienced by the complex during the catalytic turnover. The common structural blocks were used as a starting point of the spinach CF1 structure rebuilding. Finally, tentoxin was docked into its putative binding site of the reconstructed structure. The docking method was initially validated in the mitochondrial enzyme by its ability to relocate nucleotides into their original position in the crystal. Tentoxin binding was found possible to the two alpha/beta interfaces associated with the empty and adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-loaded catalytic sites, but not to the one associated with the ATP-loaded site. These results suggest a mechanism of CF1 inhibition by one molecule of tentoxin, by the impossibility of the alpha/beta interface bearing tentoxin to pass through the ATP-loaded state.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Two highly conserved amino acid residues, an arginine and a glutamine, located near the C-terminal end of the gamma subunit, form a "catch" by hydrogen bonding with residues in an anionic loop on one of the three catalytic beta subunits of the bovine mitochondrial F1-ATPase [Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628]. The catch is considered to play a critical role in the binding change mechanism whereby binding of ATP to one catalytic site releases the catch and induces a partial rotation of the gamma subunit. This role is supported by the observation that mutation of the equivalent arginine and glutamine residues in the Escherichia coli F1 gamma subunit drastically reduced all ATP-dependent catalytic activities of the enzyme [Greene, M. D., and Frasch, W. D. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 5194-5198]. In this study, we show that simultaneous substitution of the equivalent residues in the chloroplast F1 gamma subunit, arginine 304 and glutamine 305, with alanine decreased the level of proton-coupled ATP synthesis by more than 80%. Both the Mg2+-dependent and Ca2+-dependent ATP hydrolysis activities increased by more than 3-fold as a result of these mutations; however, the sulfite-stimulated activity decreased by more than 60%. The Mg2+-dependent, but not the Ca2+-dependent, ATPase activity of the double mutant was insensitive to inhibition by the phytotoxic inhibitor tentoxin, indicating selective loss of catalytic cooperativity in the presence of Mg2+ ions. The results indicate that the catch residues are required for efficient proton coupling and for activation of multisite catalysis when MgATP is the substrate. The catch is not, however, required for CaATP-driven multisite catalysis or, therefore, for rotation of the gamma subunit.  相似文献   

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