2V7Q
The structure of F1-ATPase inhibited by I1-60HIS, a monomeric form of the inhibitor protein, IF1.
Summary for 2V7Q
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb2v7q/pdb |
Related | 1BMF 1COW 1E1Q 1E1R 1E79 1EFR 1H8E 1H8H 1NBM 1OHH 1QO1 1W0J 1W0K 2CK3 2JDI 2JIZ 2JJ1 2JJ2 2UYS |
Descriptor | ATP SYNTHASE SUBUNIT ALPHA HEART ISOFORM, PHOSPHATE ION, ATP SYNTHASE SUBUNIT BETA, ... (11 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | ion transport, mitochondrion, transit peptide, inhibitor protein, hydrolase |
Biological source | BOS TAURUS (COW) More |
Cellular location | Mitochondrion: P00829 P05631 P05630 P05632 P01096 |
Total number of polymer chains | 10 |
Total formula weight | 382247.88 |
Authors | Gledhill, J.R.,Montgomery, M.G.,Leslie, A.G.W.,Walker, J.E. (deposition date: 2007-07-31, release date: 2007-09-18, Last modification date: 2023-12-13) |
Primary citation | Gledhill, J.R.,Montgomery, M.G.,Leslie, A.G.W.,Walker, J.E. How the Regulatory Protein, If1, Inhibits F1- ATPase from Bovine Mitochondria. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA, 104:15671-, 2007 Cited by PubMed Abstract: The structure of bovine F(1)-ATPase inhibited by a monomeric form of the inhibitor protein, IF(1), known as I1-60His, lacking most of the dimerization region, has been determined at 2.1-A resolution. The resolved region of the inhibitor from residues 8-50 consists of an extended structure from residues 8-13, followed by two alpha-helices from residues 14-18 and residues 21-50 linked by a turn. The binding site in the beta(DP)-alpha(DP) catalytic interface is complex with contributions from five different subunits of F(1)-ATPase. The longer helix extends from the external surface of F(1) via a deep groove made from helices and loops in the C-terminal domains of subunits beta(DP), alpha(DP), beta(TP), and alpha(TP) to the internal cavity surrounding the central stalk. The linker and shorter helix interact with the gamma-subunit in the central stalk, and the N-terminal region extends across the central cavity to interact with the nucleotide binding domain of the alpha(E) subunit. To form these complex interactions and penetrate into the core of the enzyme, it is likely that the initial interaction of the inhibitor with F(1) forms via the open conformation of the beta(E) subunit. Then, as two ATP molecules are hydrolyzed, the beta(E)-alpha(E) interface converts to the beta(DP)-alpha(DP) interface via the beta(TP)-alpha(TP) interface, trapping the inhibitor progressively in its binding site and a nucleotide in the catalytic site of subunit beta(DP). The inhibition probably arises by IF(1) imposing the structure and properties of the beta(TP)-alpha(TP) interface on the beta(DP)-alpha(DP) interface, thereby preventing it from hydrolyzing the bound ATP. PubMed: 17895376DOI: 10.1073/PNAS.0707326104 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.1 Å) |
Structure validation
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