4.5 Article

Conformational Transitions of Subunit ε in ATP Synthase from Thermophilic Bacillus PS3

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 98, Issue 3, Pages 434-442

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2009.10.023

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Subunit epsilon of bacterial and chloroplast FOF1-ATP synthase is responsible for inhibition of ATPase activity. In Bacillus PS3 enzyme, subunit epsilon can adopt two conformations. In the extended, inhibitory conformation, its two C-terminal alpha-helices are stretched along subunit gamma. In the contracted, noninhibitory conformation, these helices form a hairpin. The transition of subunit epsilon from an extended to a contracted state was studied in ATP synthase incorporated in Bacillus PS3 membranes at 59 degrees C. Fluorescence energy resonance transfer between fluorophores introduced in the C-terminus of subunit epsilon and in the N-terminus of subunit gamma was used to follow the conformational transition in real time. It was found that ATIP induced the conformational transition from the extended to the contracted state (half-maximum transition extent at 140 mu M ATIP). ADP could neither prevent nor reverse the ATP-induced conformational change, but it did slow it down. Acid residues in the DELSEED region of subunit beta were found to stabilize the extended conformation of epsilon. Binding of ATP directly to epsilon was not essential for the ATP-induced conformational change. The ATP concentration necessary for the half-maximal transition (140 mu M) suggests that subunit epsilon probably adopts the extended state and strongly inhibits ATP hydrolysis only when the intracellular ATP level drops significantly below the normal value.

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