| Literature DB >> 35047087 |
Alexander B Tong1,2,3, Carlos Bustamante1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8.
Abstract
Ring ATPases perform a variety of tasks in the cell. Their function involves complex communication and coordination among the often identical subunits. Translocases in this group are of particular interest as they involve both chemical and mechanical actions in their operation. We study the DNA packaging motor of bacteriophage φ29, and using single-molecule optical tweezers and single-particle cryo-electron microscopy, have discovered a novel translocation mechanism for a molecular motor.Entities:
Keywords: Cryo-electron microscopy; Optical tweezers; Ring atpase; Translocase
Year: 2021 PMID: 35047087 PMCID: PMC8724481 DOI: 10.1007/s12551-021-00883-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys Rev ISSN: 1867-2450
Fig. 1Mechanisms for lock-washer ring ATPase translocases. Shown above are cartoons of translocation mechanisms for a pentameric DNA packaging motor. The substrate is shown as a spiral of blue spheres, representing the phosphates of one strand of the DNA. The motor is represented by an assembly of larger spheres, colored by nucleotide state (green/yellow/black for ATP/ADP/apo, respectively) and the subunit connectivity is depicted by cylinders. The capsid is shown in gray above the motors, and the direction of packaging is towards the capsid. a In the helical inchworm mechanism, the motor first exchanges ADP for ATP while the ring opens to span one pitch of the DNA (D1–D6). Then, hydrolysis in the special subunit (marked with an S) causes the hydrolysis cascade (B1–B2), translocating 2.5 bp of DNA in four steps (B2–B6). A phosphate of the DNA is colored purple and dotted lines 2.5 bp apart are drawn as a guide. b In the hand-over-hand mechanism, we start from a fully ATP-bound motor (T). Hydrolysis of the uppermost subunit translocates 2 bp of DNA (D). Subsequent nucleotide exchange of this subunit causes it to relocate to the bottom of the ring (A, T). Now the cycle restarts, as the current state can be related to the original one via a rotation