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FF ATP synthase molecular motor mechanisms. | LitMetric

FF ATP synthase molecular motor mechanisms.

Front Microbiol

School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States.

Published: August 2022

The F-ATP synthase, consisting of F and F motors connected by a central rotor and the stators, is the enzyme responsible for synthesizing the majority of ATP in all organisms. The F (αβ) ring stator contains three catalytic sites. Single-molecule F rotation studies revealed that ATP hydrolysis at each catalytic site (0°) precedes a power-stroke that rotates subunit-γ 120° with angular velocities that vary with rotational position. Catalytic site conformations vary relative to subunit-γ position (β, empty; β, ADP bound; β, ATP-bound). During a power stroke, β binds ATP (0°-60°) and β releases ADP (60°-120°). Årrhenius analysis of the power stroke revealed that elastic energy powers rotation unwinding the γ-subunit coiled-coil. Energy from ATP binding at 34° closes β upon subunit-γ to drive rotation to 120° and forcing the subunit-γ to exchange its tether from β to β, which changes catalytic site conformations. In FF, the membrane-bound F complex contains a ring of c-subunits that is attached to subunit-γ. This c-ring rotates relative to the subunit-a stator in response to transmembrane proton flow driven by a pH gradient, which drives subunit-γ rotation in the opposite direction to force ATP synthesis in F. Single-molecule studies of FF embedded in lipid bilayer nanodisks showed that the c-ring transiently stopped F-ATPase-driven rotation every 36° (at each c-subunit in the c-ring of FF) and was able to rotate 11° in the direction of ATP synthesis. Protonation and deprotonation of the conserved carboxyl group on each c-subunit is facilitated by separate groups of subunit-a residues, which were determined to have different pKa's. Mutations of any of any residue from either group changed both pKa values, which changed the occurrence of the 11° rotation proportionately. This supports a Grotthuss mechanism for proton translocation and indicates that proton translocation occurs during the 11° steps. This is consistent with a mechanism in which each 36° of rotation the c-ring during ATP synthesis involves a proton translocation-dependent 11° rotation of the c-ring, followed by a 25° rotation driven by electrostatic interaction of the negatively charged unprotonated carboxyl group to the positively charged essential arginine in subunit-a.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9447477PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.965620DOI Listing

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