Defining steps in RAVE-catalyzed V-ATPase assembly using purified RAVE and V-ATPase subcomplexes.

J Biol Chem

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York, USA. Electronic address:

Published: August 2021

The vacuolar H-ATPase (V-ATPase) is a highly conserved proton pump responsible for the acidification of intracellular organelles in virtually all eukaryotic cells. V-ATPases are regulated by the rapid and reversible disassembly of the peripheral V domain from the integral membrane V domain, accompanied by release of the V C subunit from both domains. Efficient reassembly of V-ATPases requires the Regulator of the H-ATPase of Vacuoles and Endosomes (RAVE) complex in yeast. Although a number of pairwise interactions between RAVE and V-ATPase subunits have been mapped, the low endogenous levels of the RAVE complex and lethality of constitutive RAV1 overexpression have hindered biochemical characterization of the intact RAVE complex. We describe a novel inducible overexpression system that allows purification of native RAVE and RAVE-V complexes. Both purified RAVE and RAVE-V contain substoichiometric levels of subunit C. RAVE-V binds tightly to expressed subunit C in vitro, but binding of subunit C to RAVE alone is weak. Neither RAVE nor RAVE-V interacts with the N-terminal domain of V subunit Vph1 in vitro. RAVE-V complexes, like isolated V, have no MgATPase activity, suggesting that RAVE cannot reverse V inhibition generated by rotation of subunit H and entrapment of MgADP that occur upon disassembly. However, purified RAVE can accelerate reassembly of V carrying a mutant subunit H incapable of inhibition with V complexes reconstituted into lipid nanodiscs, consistent with its catalytic activity in vivo. These results provide new insights into the possible order of events in V-ATPase reassembly and the roles of the RAVE complex in each event.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8138766PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100703DOI Listing

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