Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M117.784959
Title: The uniqueness of subunit alpha of mycobacterial F-ATP synthases: An evolutionary variant for niche adaptation
Authors: Ragunathan, Priya
Sielaff, Hendrik
Sundararaman, Lavanya
Biukovic, Goran 
Manimekalai, Malathy Sony Subramanian
Singh, Dhirendra
Kundu, Subhashri
Wohland, Thorsten 
Frasch, Wayne
Dick, Thomas 
Gruber, Gerhard
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
PARACOCCUS-DENITRIFICANS
F1FO-ATP SYNTHASE
F1F0-ATP SYNTHASE
ROTATION
PURIFICATION
MECHANISM
RESOLUTION
PROTEIN
MOTOR
SCATTERING
Issue Date: 7-Jul-2017
Publisher: AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
Citation: Ragunathan, Priya, Sielaff, Hendrik, Sundararaman, Lavanya, Biukovic, Goran, Manimekalai, Malathy Sony Subramanian, Singh, Dhirendra, Kundu, Subhashri, Wohland, Thorsten, Frasch, Wayne, Dick, Thomas, Gruber, Gerhard (2017-07-07). The uniqueness of subunit alpha of mycobacterial F-ATP synthases: An evolutionary variant for niche adaptation. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY 292 (27) : 11262-11279. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M117.784959
Abstract: The F1F0-ATP (F-ATP) synthase is essential for growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB). In addition to their synthase function most F-ATP synthases possess an ATP-hydrolase activity, which is coupled to proton-pumping activity. However, the mycobacterial enzyme lacks this reverse activity, but the reason for this deficiency is unclear. Here, we report that a Mycobacterium-specific, 36-amino acid long C-terminal domain in the nucleotide-binding subunit α (Mtα) of F-ATP synthase suppresses its ATPase activity and determined the mechanism of suppression. First, we employed vesicles to show that in intact membrane-embedded mycobacterial F-ATP synthases deletion of the C-terminal domain enabled ATPase and proton-pumping activity. We then generated a heterologous F-ATP synthase model system, which demonstrated that transfer of the mycobacterial C-terminal domain to a standard F-ATP synthase α subunit suppresses ATPase activity. Single-molecule rotation assays indicated that the introduction of this Mycobacterium-specific domain decreased the angular velocity of the power-stroke after ATP binding. Solution X-ray scattering data and NMR results revealed the solution shape of Mtα and the 3D structure of the subunit α C-terminal peptide 521PDEHVEALDEDKLAKEAVKV540 of M. tubercolosis (Mtα(521–540)), respectively. Together with cross-linking studies, the solution structural data lead to a model, in which Mtα(521–540) comes in close proximity with subunit γ residues 104–109, whose interaction may influence the rotation of the camshaft-like subunit γ. Finally, we propose that the unique segment Mtα(514–549), which is accessible at the C terminus of mycobacterial subunit α, is a promising drug epitope.
Source Title: JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/241680
ISSN: 0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.784959
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