Abstract

Phosphorylation of ADP and nucleotide exchange by membrane-bound coupling factor CF 1 are very fast reactions in the light, so that a direct comparison of both reactions is difficult. By adding substrate ADP and phosphate to illuminated thylakoids together with the uncoupler FCCP, the phosphorylation time is limited and the amount of ATP formed can be reduced to less than 1 ATP per enzyme. Low concentrations of medium nucleotides during illumination increase the amount of ATP formed during uncoupling presumably by binding to the tight nucleotide binding site (further designated as ‘site A’) with an affinity of 1 to 7 μM for ADP and ATP. ATP formation itself shows half-saturation at about 30 μM. Loosely bound nucleotides are exchanged upon addition of nucleotides with uncoupler (Schumann, J. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 766, 334–342). Release depends binding of nucleotides to a second site. The affinity of this site for ADP (in the presence of phosphate) is about 30 μM. It is assumed that phosphorylation and induction of exchange both occur on the same site (site B). During ATP hydrolysis, an ATP molecule is bound to site A, while on another site, ATP is hydrolyzed rapidly. The affinity of ADP for the catalytic site (70 μM) is in the same range as the observed Michaelis constant of ADP during phosphorylation; it is assumed that site B is involved in ATP hydrolysis. Site A exhibits some catalytic activity; it might be that site A is involved in ATP formation in a dual-site mechanism. For ATP hydrolysis, however, direct determination of exchange rates showed that the exchange rate of ATP bound to site A is about 30-times lower than ATP hydrolysis under the same conditions.

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