| Literature DB >> 19028677 |
Hiromasa Yagi1, Nobumoto Kajiwara, Tomoyuki Iwabuchi, Kenya Izumi, Masasuke Yoshida, Hideo Akutsu.
Abstract
The rotation of F1-ATPase (F1) is driven by the open/close bending motion of the beta subunit. The mechanism underlying the bending motion was investigated for the F1beta monomer from thermophilic Bacillus PS3 (TF1beta) in solution, using mutagenesis and NMR. The hydrogen bond networks involving the side chains of Lys-164 (numbering for TF1beta; 162 for mitochondrial F1beta in parentheses), Thr-165(163), Arg-191(189), Asp-252(256), Asp-311(315), and Arg-333(337) in the catalytic region are significantly different for the ligand-bound and freebeta subunits in the crystal structures of mitochondrial F1. The role of each amino acid residue was examined by Ala substitution. beta(K164A) reduced the affinity constant for 5'-adenyl-beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate by 20-fold and abolished the conformational change associated with nucleotide binding and the ATPase activity of alpha3beta(K164A)3gamma.beta(T165A) and beta(D252A) exhibited no effect on the binding affinity but abolished the conformational change and the ATPase activity. The chemical shift perturbation of backbone amide signals of the segmentally labeled beta(mutant)s indicated stepwise propagation of the open/close conversion on ligand binding. The key action in the conversion is the switching of the hydrogen-bonding partner of Asp-252 from Lys-164 to Thr-165. Residual dipolar coupling analysis revealed that the closed conformation of the beta monomer was more closed than that in the crystal structure and was different for MgATP- and MgADP-bound beta subunits. Actually, MgATP induced a conformational change around Tyr-307 (311 for MF1beta), whereas MgADP did not. The significance of these findings is discussed in connection with the catalytic rotation of F1-ATPase.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19028677 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M808212200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157