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Molecular architecture of the N‐type ATPase rotor ring from Burkholderia pseudomallei
Authors:Deryck J Mills  Werner Kühlbrandt  Thomas Meier
Institution:Department of Structural Biology, Max Planck Institute of Biophysics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Abstract:The genome of the highly infectious bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei harbors an atp operon that encodes an N‐type rotary ATPase, in addition to an operon for a regular F‐type rotary ATPase. The molecular architecture of N‐type ATPases is unknown and their biochemical properties and cellular functions are largely unexplored. We studied the B. pseudomallei N1No‐type ATPase and investigated the structure and ion specificity of its membrane‐embedded c‐ring rotor by single‐particle electron cryo‐microscopy. Of several amphiphilic compounds tested for solubilizing the complex, the choice of the low‐density, low‐CMC detergent LDAO was optimal in terms of map quality and resolution. The cryoEM map of the c‐ring at 6.1 Å resolution reveals a heptadecameric oligomer with a molecular mass of ~141 kDa. Biochemical measurements indicate that the c17 ring is H+ specific, demonstrating that the ATPase is proton‐coupled. The c17 ring stoichiometry results in a very high ion‐to‐ATP ratio of 5.7. We propose that this N‐ATPase is a highly efficient proton pump that helps these melioidosis‐causing bacteria to survive in the hostile, acidic environment of phagosomes.
Keywords:   Burkholderia pseudomallei     c‐ring stoichiometry  cryoEM  N‐type rotary ATPase  proton homeostasis
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