23 research outputs found
The dynamic stator stalk of rotary ATPases
Rotary ATPases couple ATP hydrolysis/synthesis with proton translocation across biological membranes and so are central components of the biological energy conversion machinery. Their peripheral stalks are essential components that counteract torque generated by rotation of the central stalk during ATP synthesis or hydrolysis. Here we present a 2.25-Ã… resolution crystal structure of the peripheral stalk from Thermus thermophilus A-type ATPase/synthase. We identify bending and twisting motions inherent within the structure that accommodate and complement a radial wobbling of the ATPase headgroup as it progresses through its catalytic cycles, while still retaining azimuthal stiffness necessary to counteract rotation of the central stalk. The conformational freedom of the peripheral stalk is dictated by its unusual right-handed coiled-coil architecture, which is in principle conserved across all rotary ATPases. In context of the intact enzyme, the dynamics of the peripheral stalks provides a potential mechanism for cooperativity between distant parts of rotary ATPases
Crystal and solution structure of the C-terminal part of the Methanocaldococcus jannaschii A1AO ATP synthase subunit E revealed by X-ray diffraction and small-angle X-ray scattering.
The structure of the C-terminus of subunit E (E(101-206)) of Methanocaldococcus jannaschii A-ATP synthase was determined at 4.1 A. E(101-206) consist of a N-terminal globular domain with three alpha-helices and four antiparallel beta-strands and an alpha-helix at the very C-terminus. Comparison of M. jannaschii E(101-206) with the C-terminus E(81-198) subunit E from Pyrococcus horikoshii OT3 revealed that the kink in the C-terminal alpha-helix of E(81-198), involved in dimer formation, is absent in M. jannaschii E(101-206). Whereas a major dimeric surface interface is present between the P. horikoshii E(81-198) molecules in the asymmetric unit, no such interaction could be found in the M. jannaschii E(101-206) molecules. To verify the oligomeric behaviour, the low resolution structure of the recombinant E(85-206) from M. jannaschii was determined using small angle X-ray scattering. Rigid body modeling of two copies of one of the monomer established a fit with a tail to tail arrangement