4.8 Article

Comparison of the H+/ATP ratios of the H+-ATP synthases from yeast and from chloroplast

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1202799109

Keywords

chemiosmotic theory; protonmotive force; bioenergetics; nanomachine

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F0F1-ATP synthases use the free energy derived from a transmembrane proton transport to synthesize ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. The number of protons translocated per ATP (H+/ATP ratio) is an important parameter for the mechanism of the enzyme and for energy transduction in cells. Current models of rotational catalysis predict that the H+/ATP ratio is identical to the stoichiometric ratio of c-subunits to beta-subunits. We measured in parallel the H+/ATP ratios at equilibrium of purified F(0)F(1)s from yeast mitochondria (c/beta = 3.3) and from spinach chloroplasts (c/beta = 4.7). The isolated enzymes were reconstituted into liposomes and, after energization of the proteoliposomes with acid-base transitions, the initial rates of ATP synthesis and hydrolysis were measured as a function of Delta pH. The equilibrium Delta pH was obtained by interpolation, and from its dependency on the stoichiometric ratio, [ATP]/([ADP].[(P)i]), finally the thermodynamic H+/ATP ratios were obtained: 2.9 +/- 0.2 for the mitochondrial enzyme and 3.9 +/- 0.3 for the chloroplast enzyme. The data show that the thermodynamic H+/ATP ratio depends on the stoichiometry of the c-subunit, although it is not identical to the c/beta ratio.

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