4.8 Article

Extrinsic conditions influence the self-association and structure of IF1, the regulatory protein of mitochondrial ATP synthase

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1903535116

Keywords

mitochondria; ATP hydrolysis; regulation; inhibitor; intrinsically disordered protein

Funding

  1. Cambridge Trust
  2. St. Catharine's College, Cambridge
  3. Cambridge Philosophical Society
  4. Medical Research Council, UK [MC_U105663150, MC_UU_00015/8, MR/M009858/1]
  5. Wellcome Trust [WT095195]
  6. MRC [MC_EX_MR/M009858/1, MC_UU_00015/8, MC_U105663150] Funding Source: UKRI

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The endogenous inhibitor of ATP synthase in mitochondria, called IF1, conserves cellular energy when the proton-motive force collapses by inhibiting ATP hydrolysis. Around neutrality, the 84-amino-acid bovine IF1 is thought to self-assemble into active dimers and, under alkaline conditions, into inactive tetramers and higher oligomers. Dimerization is mediated by formation of an antiparallel alpha-helical coiled-coil involving residues 44-84. The inhibitory region of each monomer from residues 1-46 is largely a-helical in crystals, but disordered in solution. The formation of the inhibited enzyme complex requires the hydrolysis of two ATP molecules, and in the complex the disordered region from residues 8-13 is extended and is followed by an alpha-helix from residues 14-18 and a longer alpha-helix from residue 21, which continues unbroken into the coiled-coil region. From residues 21-46, the long a-helix binds to other alpha-helices in the C-terminal region of predominantly one of the beta-subunits in the most closed of the three catalytic interfaces. The definition of the factors that influence the self-association of IF1 is a key to understanding the regulation of its inhibitory properties. Therefore, we investigated the influence of pH and salt-types on the self-association of bovine IF1 and the folding of its unfolded region. We identified the equilibrium between dimers and tetramers as a potential central factor in the in vivo modulation of the inhibitory activity and suggest that the intrinsically disordered region makes its inhibitory potency exquisitely sensitive and responsive to physiological changes that influence the capability of mitochondria to make ATP.

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