Structure and conformational states of the bovine mitochondrial ATP synthase by cryo-EM

Anna Zhou(University of Toronto), Alexis Rohou(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Daniel Schep(University of Toronto), John V. Bason(MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit), M.G. Montgomery(MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit), John E. Walker(MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit), Nikolaus Grigorieff(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), John L. Rubinstein(University of Toronto)
eLife
October 6, 2015
Cited by 308Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the chemical energy currency of biology, is synthesized in eukaryotic cells primarily by the mitochondrial ATP synthase. ATP synthases operate by a rotary catalytic mechanism where proton translocation through the membrane-inserted FO region is coupled to ATP synthesis in the catalytic F1 region via rotation of a central rotor subcomplex. We report here single particle electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM) analysis of the bovine mitochondrial ATP synthase. Combining cryo-EM data with bioinformatic analysis allowed us to determine the fold of the a subunit, suggesting a proton translocation path through the FO region that involves both the a and b subunits. 3D classification of images revealed seven distinct states of the enzyme that show different modes of bending and twisting in the intact ATP synthase. Rotational fluctuations of the c8-ring within the FO region support a Brownian ratchet mechanism for proton-translocation-driven rotation in ATP synthases.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis