| Literature DB >> 27765627 |
Gregory A Fendley1, Ina L Urbatsch2, Roger B Sutton3, Maria E Zoghbi4, Guillermo A Altenberg5.
Abstract
ATP-binding cassette proteins are ubiquitously present throughout all known genomes. Their basic functional unit possesses two transmembrane domains and two nucleotide-binding domains. The nucleotide-binding domains are responsible for ATP binding and hydrolysis, and their 3-dimensional structure is conserved across ATP-binding cassette proteins. Binding of ATP produces nucleotide-binding domain dimerization, a step necessary for hydrolysis. However, the possibility that nucleotide-binding domains bind and/or hydrolyze nucleotide triphosphates different from ATP has not been explored in detail. Here, we studied that possibility using M. jannaschii MJ0796, a prototypical ATP-binding cassette nucleotide-binding domain. We found that nucleotide-binding domain dimerization occurs as a result of binding to the natural nucleotide triphosphates ATP, GTP, CTP and UTP, and also to the analog ATP-γ-S. All the natural nucleotide triphosphates are hydrolyzed at similar rates, whereas ATP-γ-S is not hydrolyzed. We also found that the non-hydrolyzable ATP analog AMP-PNP, frequently assumed to produce the nucleotide-bound conformation, failed to elicit nucleotide-binding domain dimerization. Our results raise the possibility that not all the nucleotide binding sites of nucleotide-binding domains are occupied by ATP under physiological conditions, and that ATP is not always the nucleotide hydrolyzed to dissociate the nucleotide-binding domain dimers.Entities:
Keywords: ABC protein; ATPase; Dimer; Motor domain; Tryptophan fluorescence
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27765627 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2016.10.046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575