Open Biology (Jan 2015)

Purification, characterization and crystallization of the F-ATPase from Paracoccus denitrificans

  • Edgar Morales-Rios,
  • Ian N. Watt,
  • Qifeng Zhang,
  • Shujing Ding,
  • Ian M. Fearnley,
  • Martin G. Montgomery,
  • Michael J. O. Wakelam,
  • John E. Walker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.150119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 9

Abstract

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The structures of F-ATPases have been determined predominantly with mitochondrial enzymes, but hitherto no F-ATPase has been crystallized intact. A high-resolution model of the bovine enzyme built up from separate sub-structures determined by X-ray crystallography contains about 85% of the entire complex, but it lacks a crucial region that provides a transmembrane proton pathway involved in the generation of the rotary mechanism that drives the synthesis of ATP. Here the isolation, characterization and crystallization of an integral F-ATPase complex from the α-proteobacterium Paracoccus denitrificans are described. Unlike many eubacterial F-ATPases, which can both synthesize and hydrolyse ATP, the P. denitrificans enzyme can only carry out the synthetic reaction. The mechanism of inhibition of its ATP hydrolytic activity involves a ζ inhibitor protein, which binds to the catalytic F1-domain of the enzyme. The complex that has been crystallized, and the crystals themselves, contain the nine core proteins of the complete F-ATPase complex plus the ζ inhibitor protein. The formation of crystals depends upon the presence of bound bacterial cardiolipin and phospholipid molecules; when they were removed, the complex failed to crystallize. The experiments open the way to an atomic structure of an F-ATPase complex.

Keywords