Abstract

Yeast mitochondrial F1FoATPase has three regulatory subunit proteins: ATPase inhibitor, 9K protein, and 15K protein. Mutant yeasts lacking one or more of these protein factors were constructed by gene disruption [Ichikawa, N. et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 6274-6278; Yoshida, Y. et al. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 193, 49-53]. Dissipation of the electrochemical potential of protons of the mitochondrial inner membrane by an uncoupler or by a combination of valinomycin and potassium ions induced ATP-hydrolyzing activity of F1FoATPase in mitochondria of all the mutants, as in those of wild-type cells. However, the ATPase activity was inactivated within a minute in normal mitochondria, but was not suppressed in inhibitor-deficient mitochondria, and in mitochondria lacking either 9K or 15K protein, the inactivation of ATPase was slow and incomplete. Covalent binding of inhibitor protein to the enzyme was achieved with a zero length cross-linker, EEDQ, in uncoupled normal mitochondria, in which the inhibitor linked directly to both the alpha- and beta-subunits. This result strongly suggests that the binding site of the inhibitor protein is located at the interface between the two subunits.

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