The initial stage of ATP synthesis by the E. coli wild type (WT) and mutant βD380C F1Fo-ATPase was compared at saturating substrate concentrations and a proton-motive force (pmf) of ∼315 mV. The enzymes catalyze both ATP hydrolysis (Baylis Scanlon et al., 2008, J. Biol. Chem. 283, 26228-26240) and ATP synthesis with similar steady-state parameters. ATP synthesis by the WT enzyme proceeded with neither burst nor lag-phase while ATP synthesis by βD380C (+DTT) showed a burst phase with a stoichiometry of ATP/F1Fo equal to 1. The burst was simulated using a kinetic model in which the βD380C mutant has a less than 10-fold increase in Pi binding rate in combination with a less than 10-fold decrease in ATP release rate compared to WT. Resolution of the burst allows us to distinguish the partial reactions of the ATP synthesis pathway.Comparison of the ATP release rates in ATP hydrolysis (Baylis Scanlon et al., 2007, Biochemistry 46, 8785-8797) and ATP synthesis suggest differences in the cooperative behavior in the two directions of the reaction. In ATP hydrolysis, positive cooperativity in catalysis is induced by nucleotide (ATP) only, while in ATP synthesis it is induced by both nucleotide (ADP) and the pmf. Fast steady-state ATP hydrolysis proceeds through a trisite mechanism, while ATP synthesis uses a bisite mechanism.We further analyzed the effects of the mutation by forming a stator-rotor disulfide cross-link, βD380C-γC87 induced by DTNB. The cross-linked enzyme catalyzed absolutely no ATP synthesis in the millisecond time domain after inducing a pmf. This result suggests that γ subunit mobility is required for the ATP synthetic reaction to occur and is consistent with the model that high affinity Pi binding cannot be achieved without ΔμH+-dependent γ-subunit rotation.
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