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. 2010 Jun-Jul;1797(6-7):1004-11.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2010.02.021. Epub 2010 Feb 24.

Assembly and oligomerization of human ATP synthase lacking mitochondrial subunits a and A6L

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Assembly and oligomerization of human ATP synthase lacking mitochondrial subunits a and A6L

Ilka Wittig et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2010 Jun-Jul.
Free article

Abstract

Here we study ATP synthase from human rho0 (rho zero) cells by clear native electrophoresis (CNE or CN-PAGE) and show that ATP synthase is almost fully assembled in spite of the absence of subunits a and A6L. This identifies subunits a and A6L as two of the last subunits to complete the ATP synthase assembly. Minor amounts of dimeric and even tetrameric forms of the large assembly intermediate were preserved under the conditions of CNE, suggesting that it associated further into higher order structures in the mitochondrial membrane. This result was reminiscent to the reduced amounts of dimeric and tetrameric ATP synthase from yeast null mutants of subunits e and g detected by CNE. The dimer/oligomer-stabilizing effects of subunits e/g and a/A6L seem additive in human and yeast cells. The mature IF1 inhibitor was specifically bound to the dimeric/oligomeric forms of ATP synthase and not to the monomer. Conversely, nonprocessed pre-IF1 still containing the mitochondrial targeting sequence was selectively bound to the monomeric assembly intermediate in rho0 cells and not to the dimeric form. This supports previous suggestions that IF1 plays an important role in the dimerization/oligomerization of mammalian ATP synthase and in the regulation of mitochondrial structure and function.

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