Membrane pyrophosphatases from Thermotoga maritima and Vigna radiata suggest a conserved coupling mechanism
Author(s) -
KunMou Li,
Craig Wilkinson,
Juho Kellosalo,
J.Y. Tsai,
Tommi Kajander,
Lars J. C. Jeuken,
YuhJu Sun,
Adrian Goldman
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nature communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.559
H-Index - 365
ISSN - 2041-1723
DOI - 10.1038/ncomms13596
Subject(s) - pyrophosphatases , catalytic cycle , pyrophosphate , thermotoga maritima , chemistry , helix (gastropod) , crystallography , protein structure , biophysics , ion , catalysis , stereochemistry , biochemistry , hydrolysis , enzyme , biology , ecology , organic chemistry , escherichia coli , snail , gene
Membrane-bound pyrophosphatases (M-PPases), which couple proton/sodium ion transport to pyrophosphate synthesis/hydrolysis, are important in abiotic stress resistance and in the infectivity of protozoan parasites. Here, three M-PPase structures in different catalytic states show that closure of the substrate-binding pocket by helices 5–6 affects helix 13 in the dimer interface and causes helix 12 to move down. This springs a ‘molecular mousetrap', repositioning a conserved aspartate and activating the nucleophilic water. Corkscrew motion at helices 6 and 16 rearranges the key ionic gate residues and leads to ion pumping. The pumped ion is above the ion gate in one of the ion-bound structures, but below it in the other. Electrometric measurements show a single-turnover event with a non-hydrolysable inhibitor, supporting our model that ion pumping precedes hydrolysis. We propose a complete catalytic cycle for both proton and sodium-pumping M-PPases, and one that also explains the basis for ion specificity.
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