Structure and function of the intermembrane space domain of mammalian FoF1ATP synthase

crossref(2017)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
AbstractMitochondrial FoF1ATP synthase is a membrane bound molecular machine central to cellular energy conversion and cristae architecture. Recently, a novel domain has been visualized in the intermembrane space region of mammalian ATP synthase. The complete three-dimensional (3D) structure, composition and function of this domain - which we term intermembrane space domain (IMD) - are unknown. Here, we present two distinct 3D structures of monomeric bovine FoF1ATP synthase by single particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) that differ by the presence and absence of the IMD. Comparison of both structures reveals the IMD to be a bipartite and weakly associated domain of FoF1ATP synthase. The tubular sub-domain of the IMD appears to contact the rotor-ring region, its globular sub-domain is anchored in the membrane-bending kink of the ATP synthase. However, absence of the IMD does not impact the kink in the transmembrane region ruling out a functional role in membrane bending. By combining our structural analysis with chemical cross-linking and reported biochemical, genetic and structural data we identify 6.8PL and DAPIT as the subunits forming the intermembrane space domain. We compare the present structure of the mammalian IMD in the bovine FoF1ATP synthase monomer with structures of dimeric FoF1ATP synthase from yeast and ciliate showing that the IMD is a common, but structurally divergent feature of several mitochondrial ATP synthases. On the basis of our analysis we discuss potential functions of the novel domain in rotary catalysis, oligomerization and mitochondrial permeability transition.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要