Two rotary motors in F-ATP synthase are elastically coupled by a flexible rotor and a stiff stator stalk

Autor(en): Waechter, Andre
Bi, Yumin
Dunn, Stanley D.
Cain, Brian D.
Sielaff, Hendrik
Wintermann, Frank
Engelbrecht, Siegfried
Junge, Wolfgang 
Stichwörter: 2ND STALK; ATP synthesis; B-SUBUNIT; bioenergetics; COILED-COIL; DIMERIZATION DOMAIN; ENERGY TRANSDUCTION; ESCHERICHIA-COLI F1F0-ATPASE; F-1-ATPASE; F0F1-ATPASE; Multidisciplinary Sciences; nanomotor; PERIPHERAL STALK; POWER TRANSMISSION; protein elasticity; Science & Technology - Other Topics
Erscheinungsdatum: 2011
Herausgeber: NATL ACAD SCIENCES
Journal: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Volumen: 108
Ausgabe: 10
Startseite: 3924
Seitenende: 3929
Zusammenfassung: 
ATP is synthesized by ATP synthase (FOF1-ATPase). Its rotary electromotor (F-O) translocates protons (in some organisms sodium cations) and generates torque to drive the rotary chemical generator (F-1). Elastic power transmission between FO and F1 is essential for smoothing the cooperation of these stepping motors, thereby increasing their kinetic efficiency. A particularly compliant elastic domain is located on the central rotor (c(10-15)/e/gamma), right between the two sites of torque generation and consumption. The hinge on the active lever on subunit beta adds further compliance. It is under contention whether or not the peripheral stalk (and the ``stator'' as a whole) also serves as elastic buffer. In the enzyme from Escherichia coli, the most extended component of the stalk is the homodimer b(2), a right-handed alpha-helical coiled coil. By fluctuation analysis we determined the spring constant of the stator in response to twisting and bending, and compared wild-type with b-mutant enzymes. In both deformation modes, the stator was very stiff in the wild type. It was more compliant if b was elongated by 11 amino acid residues. Substitution of three consecutive residues in b by glycine, expected to destabilize its alpha-helical structure, further reduced the stiffness against bending deformation. In any case, the stator was at least 10-fold stiffer than the rotor, and the enzyme retained its proton-coupled activity.
ISSN: 00278424
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011581108

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