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Resolving the Negative Potential Side (n-side) Water-accessible Proton Pathway of F-type ATP Synthase by Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Authors:Holger Gohlke  Daniel Schlieper  Georg Groth
Affiliation:From the Institute of Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry and ;§Institute of Biochemical Plant Physiology, Heinrich Heine University, 40204 Düsseldorf, Germany
Abstract:The rotation of F1Fo-ATP synthase is powered by the proton motive force across the energy-transducing membrane. The protein complex functions like a turbine; the proton flow drives the rotation of the c-ring of the transmembrane Fo domain, which is coupled to the ATP-producing F1 domain. The hairpin-structured c-protomers transport the protons by reversible protonation/deprotonation of a conserved Asp/Glu at the outer transmembrane helix (TMH). An open question is the proton transfer pathway through the membrane at atomic resolution. The protons are thought to be transferred via two half-channels to and from the conserved cAsp/Glu in the middle of the membrane. By molecular dynamics simulations of c-ring structures in a lipid bilayer, we mapped a water channel as one of the half-channels. We also analyzed the suppressor mutant cP24D/E61G in which the functional carboxylate is shifted to the inner TMH of the c-protomers. Current models concentrating on the “locked” and “open” conformations of the conserved carboxylate side chain are unable to explain the molecular function of this mutant. Our molecular dynamics simulations revealed an extended water channel with additional water molecules bridging the distance of the outer to the inner TMH. We suggest that the geometry of the water channel is an important feature for the molecular function of the membrane part of F1Fo-ATP synthase. The inclination of the proton pathway isolates the two half-channels and may contribute to a favorable clockwise rotation in ATP synthesis mode.
Keywords:Computational Biology   F1Fo-ATPase   Membrane Energetics   Proton Transport   Structural Biology   Energy Conversion   Proton Transfer   Rotary Molecular Motor   Water Channel
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