The F-ATP synthase, consisting of F 1 and F O motors connected by a central rotor and the stators, is the enzyme responsible for synthesizing the majority of ATP in all organisms. The F 1 (αβ) 3 ring stator contains three catalytic sites. Single-molecule F 1 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 E , empty; β D , ADP bound; β T , ATP-bound). During a power stroke, β E binds ATP (0°–60°) and β D releases ADP (60°–120°). Årrhenius analysis of the power stroke revealed that elastic energy powers rotation via unwinding the γ-subunit coiled-coil. Energy from ATP binding at 34° closes β E upon subunit-γ to drive rotation to 120° and forcing the subunit-γ to exchange its tether from β E to β D , which changes catalytic site conformations. In F 1 F O , the membrane-bound F O 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 1 . Single-molecule studies of F 1 F O embedded in lipid bilayer nanodisks showed that the c-ring transiently stopped F 1 -ATPase-driven rotation every 36° (at each c-subunit in the c 10 -ring of E. coli F 1 F O ) 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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Revisiting the protomotive vectorial motion of F 0 -ATPase
The elucidation of the detailed mechanism used by F 0 to convert proton gradient to torque and rotational motion presents a major puzzle despite significant biophysical and structural progress. Although the conceptual model has advanced our understanding of the working principles of such systems, it is crucial to explore the actual mechanism using structure-based models that actually reproduce a unidirectional proton-driven rotation. Our previous work used a coarse-grained (CG) model to simulate the action of F 0 . However, the simulations were based on a very tentative structural model of the interaction between subunit a and subunit c. Here, we again use a CG model but with a recent cryo-EM structure of cF 1 F 0 and also explore the proton path using our water flooding and protein dipole Langevin dipole semimacroscopic formalism with its linear response approximation version (PDLD/S-LRA) approaches. The simulations are done in the combined space defined by the rotational coordinate and the proton transport coordinate. The study reproduced the effect of the protomotive force on the rotation of the F 0 while establishing the electrostatic origin of this effect. Our landscape reproduces the correct unidirectionality of the synthetic direction of the F 0 rotation and shows that it reflects the combined electrostatic coupling between the proton transport path and the c-ring conformational change. This work provides guidance for further studies in other proton-driven mechanochemical systems and should lead (when combined with studies of F 1 ) to a complete energy transduction picture of the F 0 F 1 -ATPase system.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1707167
- PAR ID:
- 10144012
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Volume:
- 116
- Issue:
- 39
- ISSN:
- 0027-8424
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 19484 to 19489
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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