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Neither helix in the coiled coil region of the axle of F1-ATPase plays a significant role in torque production
Authors:Hossain Mohammad Delawar  Furuike Shou  Maki Yasushi  Adachi Kengo  Suzuki Toshiharu  Kohori Ayako  Itoh Hiroyasu  Yoshida Masasuke  Kinosita Kazuhiko
Institution:* Department of Physics, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Shinjuku-Ku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan
Department of Physics, School of Physical Sciences, Shahjalal University of Science and Technology, Sylhet 3114, Bangladesh
Department of Physics, Osaka Medical College, Osaka 569-8686, Japan
§ Chemical Resources Laboratory, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Yokohama 226-8503, Japan
ATP-Synthesis Regulation Project, International Cooperative Research Project, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Tokyo 135-0064, Japan
Tsukuba Research Laboratory, Hamamatsu Photonics KK, Tokodai, Tsukuba 300-2635, Japan
** Team 13, Formation of Soft Nano-Machines, Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology, Tokodai, Tsukuba 300-2635, Japan
Abstract:F1-ATPase is an ATP-driven rotary molecular motor in which the central γ-subunit rotates inside the cylinder made of α3β3 subunits. The amino and carboxy termini of the γ-subunit form the axle, an α-helical coiled coil that deeply penetrates the stator cylinder. We previously truncated the axle step by step, starting with the longer carboxy terminus and then cutting both termini at the same levels, resulting in a slower yet considerably powerful rotation. Here we examine the role of each helix by truncating only the carboxy terminus by 25-40 amino-acid residues. Longer truncation impaired the stability of the motor complex severely: 40 deletions failed to yield rotating the complex. Up to 36 deletions, however, the mutants produced an apparent torque at nearly half of the wild-type torque, independent of truncation length. Time-averaged rotary speeds were low because of load-dependent stumbling at 120° intervals, even with saturating ATP. Comparison with our previous work indicates that half the normal torque is produced at the orifice of the stator. The very tip of the carboxy terminus adds the other half, whereas neither helix in the middle of the axle contributes much to torque generation and the rapid progress of catalysis. None of the residues of the entire axle played a specific decisive role in rotation.
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