Publications by authors named "R Venard"

The mechanism of inhibition of yeast mitochondrial F(1)-ATPase by its natural regulatory peptide, IF1, was investigated by correlating the rate of inhibition by IF1 with the nucleotide occupancy of the catalytic sites. Nucleotide occupancy of the catalytic sites was probed by fluorescence quenching of a tryptophan, which was engineered in the catalytic site (beta-Y345W). Fluorescence quenching of a beta-Trp(345) indicates that the binding of MgADP to F(1) can be described as 3 binding sites with dissociation constants of K(d)(1) = 10 +/- 2 nm, K(d2) = 0.

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The mechanism of inhibition of yeast F(0)F(1)-ATPase by its naturally occurring protein inhibitor (IF1) was investigated in submitochondrial particles by studying the IF1-mediated ATPase inhibition in the presence and absence of a protonmotive force. In the presence of protonmotive force, IF1 added during net NTP hydrolysis almost completely inhibited NTPase activity. At moderate IF1 concentration, subsequent uncoupler addition unexpectedly caused a burst of NTP hydrolysis.

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A cDNA clone encoding a seven-transmembrane domain, G-protein-coupled receptor (NPFR76F, also called GPCR60), has been isolated from Drosophila melanogaster. Deletion mapping showed that the gene encoding this receptor is located on the left arm of the third chromosome at position 76F. Northern blotting and whole mount in situ hybridization have shown that this receptor is expressed in a limited number of neurons in the central and peripheral nervous systems of embryos and adults.

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Inhibition of the yeast F(0)F(1)-ATP synthase by the regulatory peptides IF1 and STF1 was studied using intact mitochondria and submitochondrial particles from wild-type cells or from mutants lacking one or both peptides. In intact mitochondria, endogenous IF1 only inhibited uncoupled ATP hydrolysis and endogenous STF1 had no effect. Addition of alamethicin to mitochondria readily made the mitochondrial membranes permeable to nucleotides, and bypassed the kinetic control exerted on ATP hydrolysis by the substrate carriers.

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The regulation of membrane-bound proton F0F1 ATPase by the protonmotive force and nucleotides was studied in yeast mitochondria. Activation occurred in whole mitochondria and the ATPase activity was measured just after disrupting the membranes with Triton X-100. Deactivation occurred either in whole mitochondria uncoupled with FCCP, or in disrupted membranes.

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