Abstract
ATP hydrolysis activity catalyzed by chloroplast and proteobacterial ATP synthase is inhibited by their subunits. To clarify the function of the subunit from phototrophs, here we analyzed the subunit–mediated inhibition (-inhibition) of cyanobacterial F1-ATPase, a subcomplex of ATP synthase obtained from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1. We generated three C-terminal -helix null -mutants; one lacked the C-terminal -helices, and in the other two, the C-terminal conformation could be locked by a disulfide bond formed between two -helices or an -helix and a -sandwich structure. All of these -mutants maintained ATPase-inhibiting competency. We then used single-molecule observation techniques to analyze the rotary motion of F1-ATPase in the presence of these -mutants. The stop angular position of the subunit in the presence of the -mutant was identical to that in the presence of the WT . Using magnetic tweezers, we examined recovery from the inhibited rotation and observed restoration of rotation by 80° forcing of the subunit in the case of the ADP-inhibited form, but not when the rotation was inhibited by the -mutants or by the WT subunit. These results imply that the C-terminal -helix domain of the subunit of cyanobacterial enzyme does not directly inhibit ATP hydrolysis and that its N-terminal domain alone can inhibit the hydrolysis activity. Notably, this property differed from that of the proteobacterial , which could not tightly inhibit rotation. We conclude that phototrophs and hetero-trophs differ in the subunit–mediated regulation of ATP synthase.
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CITATION STYLE
Inabe, K., Kondo, K., Yoshida, K., Wakabayashi, K. I., & Hisabori, T. (2019). The N-terminal region of the subunit from cyanobacterial ATP synthase alone can inhibit ATPase activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 294(26), 10094–10103. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA118.007131
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