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. 1990 Jun 25;265(18):10541-50.

A topological analysis of subunit alpha from Escherichia coli F1F0-ATP synthase predicts eight transmembrane segments

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  • PMID: 2162353
Free article

A topological analysis of subunit alpha from Escherichia coli F1F0-ATP synthase predicts eight transmembrane segments

M J Lewis et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

The membrane topology of subunit alpha from the Escherichia coli F1F0-ATP synthase was studied using a gene fusion technique. Fusion proteins linking different amino-terminal fragments of the alpha subunit with an enzymatically active fragment of alkaline phosphatase were constructed by both random transposition of TnphoA and site-directed mutagenesis. Those proteins with high levels of alkaline phosphatase activity are predicted to define periplasmic domains of alpha, and this was confirmed by testing for cell growth in minimal medium supplemented with polyphosphate (P greater than 75) as the sole source of phosphate. The enzymatic activity of some fusion proteins was shown to be sensitive to glucose present in the growth medium. Results from subcellular fractionation experiments suggest that these fusion proteins may be inactive even though they have a periplasmic alkaline phosphatase. The enzymatic activity appears dependent upon proteolytic release of the alkaline phosphatase moiety from its alpha subunit membrane anchor and suggests the target of glucose repression may be a protease present in the periplasm. For the topological analysis of the alpha subunit, a total of 28 unique fusion proteins were studied and the results were consistent with a model of alpha containing eight transmembrane segments, including periplasmic amino and carboxyl termini. Surprisingly, separate periplasmic domains were identified near amino acids 200, 233, and 270. These results suggest the flanking membrane spans are only 10-15 amino acids in length and not able to span a standard 30 A bilayer in an alpha-helical conformation. These short spans may have interesting mechanistic implications for the function of F0, because they contain several amino acids which appear critical for proton translocation. Finally, a fusion of alkaline phosphatase at amino acid 271, the carboxyl-terminal residue, but not at amino acid 260, was able to complement the strain RH305 (uncB-) for growth on succinate and suggests the last 11 amino acids of the alpha subunit are critical to the function of F1F0-ATP synthase.

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