Literature DB >> 15006644

High hydrostatic pressure perturbs the interactions between CF(0)F(1) subunits and induces a dual effect on activity.

Manuela O Souza1, Tânia B Creczynski-Pasa, Helena M Scofano, Peter Gräber, Julio A Mignaco.   

Abstract

Chloroplast ATP-synthase is an H(+)/ATP-driven rotary motor in which a hydrophobic multi-subunit assemblage rotates within a hydrophilic stator, and subunit interactions dictate alternate-site catalysis. To explore the relevance of these interactions for catalysis we use hydrostatic pressure to induce conformational changes and/or subunit dissociation, and the resulting changes in the ATPase activity and oligomer structure are evaluated. Under moderate hydrostatic pressure (up to 60-80 MPa), ATPase activity is increased by 1.5-fold. This is not related to an increase in the affinity for ATP, but seems to correlate with an enhanced turnover induced by pressure, and an activation volume for the ATPase reaction of -23.7 ml/mol. Higher pressure (up to 200 MPa) leads to dissociation of the enzyme, as shown by enzyme inactivation, increased binding of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate (ANS) to hydrophobic regions, and labeling of specific Cys residues on the beta and alpha subunits by N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylene-4-diamine (IAEDANS). Compression-decompression cycles (between 0.1 and 200 MPa) inactivate CF(0)F(1) in a concentration-dependent manner, although after decompression no enzyme subunit is retained on a Sephadex-G-50 centrifuge column or is further labeled by IAEDANS. It is proposed that moderate hydrostatic pressures induce elastic compression of CF(0)F(1), leading to enhanced turnover. High pressure dissociation impairs the contacts needed for rotational catalysis.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15006644     DOI: 10.1016/j.biocel.2003.10.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Biochem Cell Biol        ISSN: 1357-2725            Impact factor:   5.085


  4 in total

Review 1.  ATP synthase and the actions of inhibitors utilized to study its roles in human health, disease, and other scientific areas.

Authors:  Sangjin Hong; Peter L Pedersen
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 11.056

2.  Single-molecule analysis of the rotation of F₁-ATPase under high hydrostatic pressure.

Authors:  Daichi Okuno; Masayoshi Nishiyama; Hiroyuki Noji
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2013-10-01       Impact factor: 4.033

3.  The fully-active and structurally-stable form of the mitochondrial ATP synthase of Polytomella sp. is dimeric.

Authors:  Alexa Villavicencio-Queijeiro; Miriam Vázquez-Acevedo; Araceli Cano-Estrada; Mariel Zarco-Zavala; Marietta Tuena de Gómez; Julio A Mignaco; Monica M Freire; Helena M Scofano; Debora Foguel; Pierre Cardol; Claire Remacle; Diego González-Halphen
Journal:  J Bioenerg Biomembr       Date:  2009-02-26       Impact factor: 2.945

4.  Physiological and genomic features of Paraoceanicella profunda gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel piezophile isolated from deep seawater of the Mariana Trench.

Authors:  Ping Liu; Wanzhen Ding; Qiliang Lai; Rulong Liu; Yuli Wei; Li Wang; Zhe Xie; Junwei Cao; Jiasong Fang
Journal:  Microbiologyopen       Date:  2019-11-19       Impact factor: 3.139

  4 in total

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