4.6 Article

F0 of ATP synthase is a rotary proton channel.: Obligatory coupling of proton translocation with rotation of c-subunit ring.

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 277, Issue 15, Pages 13281-13285

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111210200

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Coupling of proton flow and rotation in the F-0 motor of ATP synthase was investigated using the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 enzyme expressed functionally in Escherichia coli cells. Cysteine residues introduced into the N-terminal regions of subunits b and c of ATP synthase (bL2C/cS2C) were readily oxidized by treating the expressing cells with CuCl2 to form predominantly a b-c cross-link with b-b and c-c cross-links being minor products. The oxidized ATP synthases, either in the inverted membrane vesicles or in the reconstituted proteoliposomes, showed drastically decreased proton pumping and ATPase activities compared with the reduced ones. Also, the oxidized F-0, either in the F-1-stripped inverted vesicles or in the reconstituted F-0-proteoliposomes, hardly mediated passive proton translocation through F-0. Careful analysis using single mutants (bL2C or cS2C) as controls indicated that the b-c cross-link was responsible for these defects. Thus, rotation of the c-oligomer ring relative to subunit b is obligatory for proton translocation; if there is no rotation of the c-ring there is no proton flow through F-0.

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