F(1)-ATPase is a rotary molecular motor that proceeds in 120 degrees steps, each driven by ATP hydrolysis. How the chemical reactions that occur in three catalytic sites are coupled to mechanical rotation is the central question. Here, we show by high-speed imaging of rotation in single molecules of F(1) that phosphate release drives the last 40 degrees of the 120 degrees step, and that the 40 degrees rotation accompanies reduction of the affinity for phosphate. We also show, by single-molecule imaging of a fluorescent ATP analog Cy3-ATP while F(1) is forced to rotate slowly, that release of Cy3-ADP occurs at approximately 240 degrees after it is bound as Cy3-ATP at 0 degrees . This and other results suggest that the affinity for ADP also decreases with rotation, and thus ADP release contributes part of energy for rotation. Together with previous results, the coupling scheme is now basically complete.
F1-adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) is an ATP-driven rotary molecular motor in which the central gamma subunit rotates inside a cylinder made of three alpha and three beta subunits alternately arranged. The rotor shaft, an antiparallel alpha-helical coiled coil of the amino and carboxyl termini of the gamma subunit, deeply penetrates the central cavity of the stator cylinder. We truncated the shaft step by step until the remaining rotor head would be outside the cavity and simply sat on the concave entrance of the stator orifice. All truncation mutants rotated in the correct direction, implying torque generation, although the average rotary speeds were low and short mutants exhibited moments of irregular motion. Neither a fixed pivot nor a rigid axle was needed for rotation of F1-ATPase.
Filamin A (ABP-280), which is an actin-binding protein of 560 kDa as a dimer, can, together with actin filaments, produce an isotropic cross-linked three-dimensional network (actin/filamin A gel) that plays an important role in mechanical responses of cells in processes such as maintenance of membrane stability and translational locomotion. In this study, we investigated the mechanical properties of single filamin A molecules using atomic force microscopy. In force^extension curves, we observed sawtooth patterns corresponding to the unfolding of individual immunoglobulin (Ig)-fold domains of filamin A. At a pulling speed of 0.37 W Wm/s, the unfolding interval was sharply distributed around 30 nm, while the unfolding force ranged from 50 to 220 pN. This wide distribution of the unfolding force can be explained by variation in values of activation energy and the width of activation barrier of 24 Ig-fold domains of the filamin A at the unfolding transition. This unfolding can endow filamin A with great extensibility. The refolding of the unfolded chain of filamin A occurred when the force applied to the protein was reduced to near zero, indicating that its unfolding is reversible. Based on these results, we discuss here the physiological implications of the mechanical properties of single filamin A molecules. ß 2001 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
F(1)-ATPase is a rotary molecular motor in which the central gamma-subunit rotates inside a cylinder made of alpha(3)beta(3)-subunits. The rotation is driven by ATP hydrolysis in three catalytic sites on the beta-subunits. How many of the three catalytic sites are filled with a nucleotide during the course of rotation is an important yet unsettled question. Here we inquire whether F(1) rotates at extremely low ATP concentrations where the site occupancy is expected to be low. We observed under an optical microscope rotation of individual F(1) molecules that carried a bead duplex on the gamma-subunit. Time-averaged rotation rate was proportional to the ATP concentration down to 200 pM, giving an apparent rate constant for ATP binding of 2 x 10(7) M(-1)s(-1). A similar rate constant characterized bulk ATP hydrolysis in solution, which obeyed a simple Michaelis-Menten scheme between 6 mM and 60 nM ATP. F(1) produced the same torque of approximately 40 pN.nm at 2 mM, 60 nM, and 2 nM ATP. These results point to one rotary mechanism governing the entire range of nanomolar to millimolar ATP, although a switchover between two mechanisms cannot be dismissed. Below 1 nM ATP, we observed less regular rotations, indicative of the appearance of another reaction scheme.
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