Abstract

We have performed a detailed structural analysis of the soluble Mg 2+-ATPase complex purified from Xenopus laevis ovary, which is an abundant and ubiquitous homo-oligomeric protein complex located in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm, belonging to a novel multigene-family of putative Mg 2+-ATPases. Enzyme activity staining after non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that Mg 2+-ATPase activity of the native protein is dependent on oligomerization and could not be detected in dissociated subunits. For the native protein a sedimentation coefficient of 15·3 S and a corresponding relative molecular mass of 612,000 was determined by analytical ultracentrifugation and a relative molecular mass of 590,000 was estimated from scanning transmission electron microscopy, supporting our previous conclusion that the oligomer comprises six 97,000 M r subunits. Conventional electron microscopy of negatively stained specimens revealed the Mg 2+-ATPase complex to be a hexagonal molecule in its favoured “end-on” projection and a double-banded molecule in its “side-on” projection (approx. 12 nm diameter; approx. 9 nm height). In addition, dimerized complexes could be observed in negatively stained specimens, yielding pronounced hexameric images and four-banded images in their end-on and side-on orientations, respectively (approx. 12 nm diameter; approx. 18·5 nm height). Two-dimensional (2D = mono-molecular) crystals have been produced from the dimerized complexes by the negative staining carbon film technique. Hexagonal crystals with a p6 plane group symmetry were obtained from molecules in their end-on orientation and longitudinal arrays with a p2 symmetry from complexes in their side-on orientation. A low-resolution molecular model of the native protein, derived from averages of these two 2D crystals, is presented. From our results we propose oligomerization as an inherent structural principle of organization for this whole newly defined Mg 2+-ATPase multigene-family, that includes such seemingly diverse functionally defined proteins as mammalian and yeast “vesicle fusion” and “peroxisome assembly” proteins and the product of the yeast cell cycle gene CDC48.

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