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1.
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   

2.
Stoichiometry of subunits in the H+-ATPase complex of Escherichia coli   总被引:35,自引:0,他引:35  
The H+-ATPase (F1F0) of Escherichia coli was purified from cells labeled with either [35S]sulfate or [U-14C-D] glucose, and the molar ratio of subunits in the complex determined. The molar ratio was calculated from the radioactivity incorporated into each subunit, using either the subunit sulfur content or subunit molecular weight. These labeling experiments confirm an alpha 3 beta 3 gamma 1 delta 1 epsilon 1 ratio of subunits in F1, and indicate a chi 1 psi 2 omega 10 ratio of subunits in F0. The chi, psi, and omega designations used here refer to the subunits of F0 in order of decreasing molecular weight. Staining with Coomassie brilliant blue gave a reliable indication of the molar ratio of subunits in F1, but very erroneous values for each of the subunits of F0. We attempted to estimate the ratio of subunits in the native membrane, since the stoichiometry determined for the purified complex could be an anomaly of purification. These estimates were made after labeling cells with [35S]sulfate during amplification of the ATPase genes carried on a lambda transducing phage. The subunit ratios in the native membrane were reasonably close to those obtained with purified F1F0. We conclude that the stoichiometry determined reflects the composition of F1F0 in the native membrane. The most surprising conclusion from this study is that there are 10 +/- 1 omega ("proteolipid") subunits in each F1F0 complex. This is considerably more than had been assumed previously.  相似文献   

3.
Trypsin cleavage has been used to probe structure-function relationships of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase (ECF1F0). Trypsin cleaved all five subunits, alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon, in isolated ECF1. Cleavage of the alpha subunit involved the removal of the N-terminal 15 residues, the beta subunit was cleaved near the C-terminus, the gamma subunit was cleaved near Ser202, and the delta and epsilon subunits appeared to be cleaved at several sites to yield small peptide fragments. Trypsin cleavage of ECF1 enhanced the ATPase activity between 6- and 8-fold in different preparations, in a time course that followed the cleavage of the epsilon subunit. This removal of the epsilon subunit increased multisite ATPase activity but not unisite ATPase activity, showing that the inhibitory role of the epsilon subunit is due to an effect on cooperativity. The detergent lauryldimethylamine oxide was found to increase multisite catalysis and also increase unisite catalysis more than 2-fold. Prolonged trypsin cleavage left a highly active ATPase containing only the alpha and beta subunits along with two fragments of the gamma subunit. All of the subunits of ECF1 were cleaved by trypsin in preparations of ECF1F0 at the same sites as in isolated ECF1. Two subunits, the beta and epsilon subunits, were cleaved at the same rate in ECF1F0 as in ECF1 alone. The alpha, gamma, and delta subunits were cleaved significantly more slowly in ECF1F0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Tritiated meta-sulfonate benzene diazonium ([3H]MSBD), a molecule structurally related to 4-aminobutyrate (GABA), which presents a reactivity toward nucleophilic amino acid residues, was synthesized to investigate the GABA binding site on the GABAA receptor. Irreversible labeling reactions using [3H]MSBD were performed on purified GABAA receptors isolated from cow brain membranes and labeled receptors were analyzed by SDS/PAGE. [3H]MSBD was found to be specifically incorporated into proteins in the 45-60 kDa molecular mass range which were identified as alpha1 subunits and beta2/beta3 subunits by immunoprecipitation with subunit-specific antibodies. The specific immunoprecipitation of alpha and beta subunits confirms that binding of [3H]MSBD occurs at the boundary of these subunits. These labeling results confirm the involvement of nucleophilic residues from the beta subunit but reveal also the contribution of yet unidentified nucleophilic residues on the alpha subunit for the GABA binding site.  相似文献   

6.
(1)N-4-Azido-2-nitrophenyl-gamma-[3H]aminobutyryl-AdoPP[NH] P(NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P) a photoactivable derivative of 5-adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AdoPP[NH]P), was synthesized. (2) Binding of [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P to soluble ATPase from beef heart mitochondria (F1) was studied in the absence of photoirradiation, and compared to that of [3H]AdoPP[NH]P. The photoactivable derivative of AdoPP[NH]P was found to bind to F1 with high affinity, like AdoPP[NH]P. Once [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P had bound to F1 in the dark, it could be released by AdoPP[NH]P, ADP and ATP, but not at all by NAP4 or AMP. Furthermore, preincubation of F1 with unlabeled AdoPP[NH]P, ADP, or ATP prevented the covalent labeling of the enzyme by [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P upon photoirradiation. (3) Photoirradiation of F1 by [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P resulted in covalent photolabeling and concomitant inactivation of the enzyme. Full inactivation corresponded to the binding of about 2 mol [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P/mol F1. Photolabeling by NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P was much more efficient in the presence than in the absence of MgCl2. (4) Bound [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P was localized on the alpha- and beta- subunits of F1. At low concentrations (less than 10 microM), bound [3H]NAP4-AdoPP[NH]P was predominantly localized on the alpha-subunit; at concentrations equal to, or greater than 75 microM, both alpha- and beta-subunits were equally labeled. (5) The extent of inactivation was independent of the nature of the photolabeled subunit (alpha or beta), suggesting that each of the two subunits, alpha and beta, is required for the activity of F1. (6) The covalently photolabeled F1 was able to form a complex with aurovertin, as does native F1. The ADP-induced fluorescence enhancement was more severely inhibited than the fluorescence quenching caused by ATP. The precentage of inactivation of F1 was virtually the same as the percentage of inhibition of the ATP-induced fluorescence quenching, suggestion that fluorescence quenching is related to the binding of ATP to the catalytic site of F1.  相似文献   

7.
Voltage-sensitive sodium channels purified from rat brain in functional form consist of a stoichiometric complex of three glycoprotein subunits, alpha of 260 kDa, beta 1 of 36 kDa, and beta 2 of 33 kDa. The alpha and beta 2 subunits are linked by disulfide bonds. The hydrophobic properties of these three subunits were examined by covalent labeling with the photoreactive hydrophobic probe 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine [( 125I]TID) which labels transmembrane segments in integral membrane proteins. All three subunits of the sodium channel were labeled by [125I]TID when the purified protein was solubilized in mixed micelles of Triton X-100 and phosphatidylcholine (4:1). The half-time for photolabeling was approximately 7 min consistent with the half-time of 9 min for photolysis of TID under our conditions. Comparable amounts of TID per mg of protein were incorporated into each subunit. Purified sodium channels reconstituted in phosphatidylcholine vesicles were also labeled by TID with comparable incorporation per mg of protein into all three subunits. The efficiency of photolabeling of the three subunits was reduced from 39 to 44% by a 2-fold expansion of the hydrophobic phase of the reaction mixture but was unaffected by a 2-fold expansion of the aqueous phase, confirming that the photolabeling reaction took place in the lipid phase of the vesicle bilayer. The hydrophobic properties of the sodium channel subunits were examined further using phase separation in the nonionic detergent Triton X-114. Under conditions in which beta 1 is dissociated from alpha, the beta 1 subunit was preferentially extracted into the Triton X-114 phase, and the disulfide-linked alpha beta 2 complex was retained in the aqueous phase. When the disulfide bonds between the alpha and beta 2 subunits were reduced with dithioerythritol, the beta 2 subunit was also preferentially extracted into the Triton X-100 phase leaving the free alpha subunit in the aqueous phase. A preparative method for isolation of the beta 1 and beta 2 subunits was developed based on this technique. Considered together, the results of our hydrophobic labeling and phase separation experiments indicate that the alpha, beta 1, and beta 2 subunits all have substantial hydrophobic domains that may interact with the hydrocarbon phase of phospholipid bilayer membranes. Since the alpha subunit is known to be a transmembrane protein with many potential membrane-spanning segments, we conclude that the beta 1 and beta 2 subunits are likely to also be integral membrane proteins with one or more membrane-spanning segments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
J Hoppe  W Sebald 《Biochimie》1986,68(3):427-434
The structure of the F0 part of ATP synthases from E. coli and Neurospora crassa was analyzed by hydrophobic surface labeling with [125I]TID. In the E. coli F0 all three subunits were freely accessible to the reagent, suggesting that these subunits are independently integrated in the membrane. Labeled amino acid residues were identified by Edman degradation of the dicyclohexylcarbodiimide binding (DCCD) proteins from E. coli and Neurospora crassa. The very similar patterns obtained with the two homologous proteins suggested the existence of tightly packed alpha-helices. The oligomeric structure of the DCCD binding protein appeared to be very rigid since little, if any, change in the labeling pattern was observed upon addition of oligomycin or DCCD to membranes from Neurospora crassa. When membranes were pretreated with DCCD prior to the reaction with [125I]TID an additionally labeled amino acid appeared at the position of Glu-65 which binds DCCD covalently, indicating the location of this inhibitor on the outside of the oligomer. It is suggested that proton conduction occurs at the surface of the oligomer of the DCCD binding protein. Possibly this oligomer rotates against the subunit alpha or beta and thus enables proton translocation. Conserved residues in subunit alpha, probably located in the lipid bilayer, might participate in the proton translocation mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
The shape and subunit arrangement of the Escherichia coli F1 ATPase (ECF1 ATPase) was investigated by synchrotron radiation x-ray solution scattering. The radius of gyration and the maximum dimension of the enzyme complex are 4.61 +/- 0.03 nm and 15.5 +/- 0.05 nm, respectively. The shape of the complex was determined ab initio from the scattering data at a resolution of 3 nm, which allowed unequivocal identification of the volume occupied by the alpha3beta3 subassembly and further positioning of the atomic models of the smaller subunits. The delta subunit was positioned near the bottom of the alpha3beta3 hexamer in a location consistent with a beta-delta disulfide formation in the mutant ECF1 ATPase, betaY331W:betaY381C:epsilonS108C, when MgADP is bound to the enzyme. The position and orientation of the epsilon subunit were found by interactively fitting the solution scattering data to maintain connection of the two-helix hairpin with the alpha3beta3 complex and binding of the beta-sandwich domain to the gamma subunit. Nucleotide-dependent changes of the delta subunit were investigated by stopped-flow fluorescence technique at 12 degrees C using N-[4-[7-(dimethylamino)-4-methyl]coumarin-3-yl]maleimide (CM) as a label. Fluorescence quenching monitored after addition of MgATP was rapid [k = 6.6 s-1] and then remained constant. Binding of MgADP and the noncleavable nucleotide analog AMP . PNP caused an initial fluorescent quenching followed by a slower decay back to the original level. This suggests that the delta subunit undergoes conformational changes and/or rearrangements in the ECF1 ATPase during ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

10.
Analysis of purified Na,K-ATPase from brine shrimp nauplii by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis reveals two large (alpha) subunits [G.L. Peterson, R.D. Ewing, S.R. Hootman, and F.P. Conte (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253:4762]. The band with lower mobility in a neutral or alkaline gel is designated alpha 1 and the band with higher mobility alpha 2. Ouabain prevents dephosphorylation of both alpha 1 and alpha 2 as documented by gel analysis, but a higher concentration of ouabain is required to prevent dephosphorylation of alpha 2. The photoaffinity label, [3H]4'(2-ethyldiazomalonyl) digitoxigenin monodigitoxiside, specifically labels alpha in a ouabain-protectable manner without labeling other contaminating proteins in the preparation. Greater than 93% of the total ouabain-protectable labeling of the alpha subunits is associated with alpha 1. The photoaffinity label, [3H]4"' (2-ethyldiazomalonyl) digitoxin, specifically labels alpha 1 and beta in a ouabain-protectable manner without labeling other contaminating proteins. These data show that in the brine shrimp the third digitoxose residue of digitoxin binds in a region in which the alpha 1 and beta chains are in close proximity. Less than 5% of the specific ouabain-protectable labeling of total alpha is associated with alpha 2. These studies indicate that cardioactive steroids have higher affinity for the alpha 1 subunit.  相似文献   

11.
In contrast to wild-type F1 adenosine triphosphatase, the beta subunits of soluble ATPase from Escherichia coli mutant strains AN120 (uncA401) and AN939 (uncD412) were not labeled by the fluorescent thiol-specific reagents 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein, 2-(4'-iodoacetamidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid or 4-[N-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl-N-methyl]amino-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole. The mutation in the alpha subunit (uncA401) of F1 ATPase thus influences the accessibility of the single cysteinyl residue in the beta subunit. Following reaction of ATPase with 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole or N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, the alpha and beta subunits of the uncA401, but not of the uncD412 mutant F1 ATPase were intensely labeled by a fluorescent thiol reagent. The mutation in the beta subunit (uncD412) thus influences the accessibility of the cysteinyl residues in the alpha subunit. In other work [Stan-Lotter, H. and Bragg, P.D. (1986) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 248] we have shown that 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and 2-(4'-iodoacetamidoanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid react with a different beta subunit from that labeled by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. This asymmetry with respect to modification by 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide was seen in both mutant enzymes. In addition, the modification of one beta subunit of the uncA401 F1 ATPase induced the previously unreactive sulfhydryl group of another beta subunit to react with 2-(4'-iodoacetamidoanilino-naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid. These results provide evidence for at least three types of conformational interactions of the major subunits of F1 ATPase: from alpha to beta, from beta to alpha, and from beta to beta. As in wild-type ATPase, labeling of membrane-bound unc mutant ATPase by a fluorescent thiol reagent modified the alpha subunits. This suggests that a conformational change of yet a different type occurs when the enzyme binds to the membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Using a novel antibody directed against the alpha4 subunit of gamma-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptors, 5% of all [3H]muscimol but only about 2% of all [3H]Ro15-4513 binding sites present in brain membrane extracts could be precipitated. This indicated that part of the alpha4 receptors containing [3H]muscimol binding sites did not contain [3H]Ro15-4513 binding sites. Immunoaffinity purification and Western blot analysis of alpha4 receptors demonstrated that not only alpha1, alpha2, alpha3, beta1, beta2, and beta3 subunits but also gamma1, gamma2, gamma3, and delta subunits can be colocalized with alpha4 subunits in native GABAA receptors. Quantification experiments, however, indicated that only 7, 33, 4, or 7% of all alpha4 receptors contained gamma1, gamma2, gamma3, or delta subunits, respectively. These data not only explain the low percentage of [3H]Ro15-4513 binding sites precipitated by the anti-alpha4 antibody but also indicate that approximately 50% of the alpha4 receptors did not contain gamma1, gamma2, gamma3, or delta subunits. These receptors, thus, either are composed of alpha4 and beta1-3 subunits only, or additionally contain epsilon, pi, or so far unidentified GABAA receptor subunits.  相似文献   

13.
Photolabeling of nucleotide binding sites in nucleotide-depleted mitochondrial F1 has been explored with 2-azido [alpha-32P]adenosine diphosphate (2-N3[alpha-32P] ADP). Control experiments carried out in the absence of photoirradiation in a Mg2+-supplemented medium indicated the presence of one high affinity binding site and five lower affinity binding sites per F1. Similar titration curves were obtained with [3H]ADP and the photoprobe 3'-arylazido-[3H]butyryl ADP [( 3H]NAP4-ADP). Photolabeling of nucleotide-depleted F1 with 2-N3[alpha-32P]ADP resulted in ATPase inactivation, half inactivation corresponding to 0.6-0.7 mol of photoprobe covalently bound per mol F1. Only the beta subunit was photolabeled, even under conditions of high loading with 2-N3[alpha-32P]ADP. The identification of the sequences labeled with the photoprobe was achieved by chemical cleavage with cyanogen bromide and enzymatic cleavage by trypsin. Under conditions of low loading with 2-N3[alpha-32P]ADP, resulting in photolabeling of only one vacant site in F1, covalently bound radioactivity was located in a peptide fragment of the beta subunit spanning Pro-320-Met-358 identical to the fragment photolabeled in native F1 (Garin, J., Boulay, F., Issartel, J.-P., Lunardi, J., and Vignais, P. V. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4431-4437). With a heavier load of photoprobe, leading to nearly 4 mol of photoprobe covalently bound per mol F1, an additional region of the beta subunit was specifically labeled, corresponding to a sequence extending from Gly-72 to Arg-83. The isolated beta subunit also displayed two binding sites for 2-N3-[alpha-32P]ADP. When F1 was first photolabeled with a low concentration of NAP4-ADP, leading to the covalent binding of 1.5 mol of NAP4-ADP/mol F1, with the bound NAP4-ADP distributed equally between the alpha and beta subunits, a subsequent photoirradiation in the presence of 2-N3[alpha-32P]ADP resulted in covalent binding of the 2-N3[alpha-32P]ADP to both alpha and beta subunits. It is concluded that each beta subunit in mitochondrial F1 contains two nucleotide binding regions, one of which belongs to the beta subunit per se, and the other to a subsite shared with a subsite located on a juxtaposed alpha subunit. Depending on the experimental conditions, the subsite located on the alpha subunit is either accessible or masked. Unmasking of the subsite in the three alpha subunits of mitochondrial F1 appears to proceed by a concerted mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Using an acetylcholine-derivatized affinity column, we have purified human alpha4beta2 neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) from a stably transfected HEK-293 cell line. Both the quantity and the quality of the purified receptor are suitable for applying biochemical methods to directly study the structure of the alpha4beta2 nAChR. In this first study, the lipid-protein interface of purified and lipid-reconstituted alpha4beta2 nAChRs was directly examined using photoaffinity labeling with the hydrophobic probe 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine ([125I]TID). [125I]TID photoincorporated into both alpha4 and beta2 subunits, and for each subunit the labeling was initially mapped to fragments containing the M4 and M1-M3 transmembrane segments. For both the alpha4 and beta2 subunits, approximately 60% of the total labeling was localized within fragments that contain the M4 segment, which suggests that the M4 segment has the greatest exposure to lipid. Within M4 segments, [125I]TID labeled homologous amino acids alpha4-Cys582/beta2-Cys445, which are also homologous to the [125I]TID-labeled residues alpha1-Cys418 and beta1-Cys447 in the lipid-exposed face of Torpedo nAChR alpha1M4 and beta1M4, respectively. Within the alpha4M1 segment, [125I]TID labeled residues Cys226 and Cys231, which correspond to the [125I]TID-labeled residues Cys222 and Phe227 at the lipid-exposed face of the Torpedo alpha1M1 segment. In beta2M1, [125I]TID labeled beta2-Cys220, which is homologous to alpha4-Cys226. We conclude from these studies that the alpha4beta2 nAChR can be purified from stably transfected HEK-293 cells in sufficient quantity and purity for structural studies and that the lipid-protein interfaces of the neuronal alpha4beta2 nAChR and the Torpedo nAChR display a high degree of structural homology.  相似文献   

15.
The sulfhydryl groups of soluble and membrane-bound F1 adenosine triphosphatase of Escherichia coli were modified by reaction with the fluorescent thiol reagents 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein, 2-[(4'-iodoacetamido)anilino]naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid 4-[N-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl-N-methyl]amino-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-d iaz ole and 2-[(4'-maleimidyl)anilino]naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid. Whereas gamma and delta subunits were always labeled by these reagents, the beta subunit reacted preferentially in the soluble enzyme, and the alpha subunit in the membrane-bound enzyme. This suggests that the soluble enzyme undergoes a conformational change on binding to the membrane. The three beta subunits of the soluble ATPase did not react with chemical reagents in a similar manner. One beta subunit was cross-linked to the epsilon subunit on treatment of the ATPase with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethyl-amino)propyl]carbodiimide, as observed previously by L?tscher et al. [Biochemistry (1984) 23, 4134-4140]. A second beta subunit, which did not cross-link to the epsilon subunit, was modified preferentially by the fluorescent thiol reagents and by 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole. The third beta subunit was less chemically reactive than the others. Both alpha and beta subunits of the soluble 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-modified enzyme were labeled by the fluorescent thiol reagents. Thus, the modified enzyme, which is inactive, probably has a different conformation from the native soluble ATPase.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
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   

18.
Three F1 preparations, the beef heart (MF1) and thermophilic bacterium (TF1) holoenzymes, and the alpha 3 beta 3 "core" complex of TF1 reconstituted from individually expressed alpha and beta subunits, were compared as to their kinetic and binding stoichiometric responses to covalent photoaffinity labeling with BzATP and BzADP (+/- Mg2+). Each enzyme displayed an enhanced pseudo-first order rate of photoinhibition and one-third of the sites covalent binding to a catalytic site for full inhibition, plus, but not minus Mg2+. Titration of near stoichiometric [MgBzADP]/[F1] ratios during photolysis disclosed two sequential covalent binding patterns for each enzyme; a high affinity binding corresponding to unistoichiometric covalent association concomitant with enzyme inhibition, followed by a low affinity multisite-saturating covalent association. Thus, in the absence of the structural asymmetry inducing gamma delta epsilon subunits of the holoenzyme, the sequential binding of nucleotide at putative catalytic sites on the alpha 3 beta 3 complex of any F1 appears sufficient to effect binding affinity changes. With MF1, final covalent saturation of BzADP-accessible sites was achieved with 2 mol of BzADP/mol of enzyme, but with TF1 or its alpha 3 beta 3 complex, saturation required 3 mol of BzADP/mol of enzyme. Such differential final labeling stoichiometries could arise because of the endogenous presence of 1 nucleotide already bound to one of the 3 potential catalytic sites on normally prepared MF1, whereas TF1, possessing no endogenous nucleotide, has 3 vacant BzADP-accessible sites. Kinetics measurements revealed that regardless of the incremental extent of inhibition of the TF1 holoenzyme by BzADP during photolysis, the two higher apparent Km values (approximately 1.5 x 10(-4) and approximately 10(-3) M, respectively) of the progressively inactivated incubation are unchanged relative to fully unmodified enzyme. As reported for BzATP (or BzADP) and MF1 (Ackerman, S.H., Grubmeyer, C., and Coleman, P.S. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 13765-13772), this supports the fact that the photocovalent inhibition of F1 is a one-hit one-kill phenomenon. Isoelectric focusing gels revealed that [3H]BzADP covalently modifies both TF1 and MF1 exclusively on the beta subunit, whether or not Mg2+ is present. A single 19-residue [3H]BzADP-labeled peptide was resolved from a tryptic digest of MF1, and this peptide corresponded with the one believed to contain at least a portion of the beta subunit catalytic site domain (i.e. beta Ala-338----beta Arg-356).  相似文献   

19.
The topology of the and subunit of the Escherichia coli adenosinetriphosphatase (ECF1) has been explored by proteinase digestion and chemical labeling methods. The delta subunit of ECF1 could be cleaved selectively by reaction of the enzyme complex with very low amounts of trypsin (1:5000, w/w). Cleavage of the delta subunit occurred serially from the C-terminus. The N-terminal fragments of the delta subunit remained bound to the core ECF1 complex through sucrose gradient centrifugation, indicating that part of the binding of this subunit involves the N-terminal segment. ECF1, in which around 20 amino acids had been removed from the C-terminus of delta, still bound to ECF0 but DCCD sensitivity of the ATPase activity was lost. When ECF1 was reacted with N-ethyl[14C]maleimide ([14C]NEM) in the native state, only one of the two Cys residues on the delta subunit was modified. This residue, Cys-140, was also labeled in ECF1F0. Cys-140 was shown to be involved in the disulfide bridge between alpha and delta subunits that is generated when ECF1 is treated with CuCl2. Thus, the C-terminal part of the delta subunit around Cys-140 can interact with the core ECF1 complex. These results suggest a model for the delta subunit in which the central part of polypeptide is a part of the stalk, with both N- and C-termini associated with ECF1.  相似文献   

20.
The photoreactive nucleotides [2-3H]8-azido-ATP and [2-3H]8-azido-ADP could be used to label the nucleotide binding sites on isolated mitochondrial F1-ATPase to a maximum of 4 mol of nucleotide per mol F1, also when the F1 was depleted of tightly bound nucleotides. At a photolabel concentration of 300-1000 microM, label was found on both alpha and beta subunits in a typically 1:3 ratio, independent of the total amount bound. Under these conditions the covalent binding of two nucleotides is needed for full inactivation (Wagenvoord, R.J., Van der Kraan, I. and Kemp, A. (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 460, 17-24). At lower concentrations of [2-3H]8-azido-ATP (20 microM), it was found that covalent binding of only 1 mol of nucleotide per mole F1 was required for complete inactivation to take place indicating catalytic site cooperativity in the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis. Under those conditions, radioactivity was only found on the beta subunits, which would indicate that the catalytic site is located on a beta subunit and that a second site is located on the alpha/beta interface. It is found that four out of the six nucleotide binding sites are exchangeable and can be labelled with 8-azido-AT(D)P, i.e., two catalytic sites and two non-catalytic sites.  相似文献   

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