ANALYSIS OF THE INHIBITORY NONCATALYTIC ADP BINDING-SITE ON MITOCHONDRIAL F1, USING NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP AS PROBE - EFFECTS OF THE MODIFICATION ON ATPASE AND ITPASE ACTIVITY
Cm. Edel et al., ANALYSIS OF THE INHIBITORY NONCATALYTIC ADP BINDING-SITE ON MITOCHONDRIAL F1, USING NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP AS PROBE - EFFECTS OF THE MODIFICATION ON ATPASE AND ITPASE ACTIVITY, Biochimica et biophysica acta. Bioenergetics, 1229(1), 1995, pp. 103-114
The ADP analogue NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP is able to bind to one or two high-af
finity sites on mitochondrial F-1-ATPase, depending on the nucleotide
content of the F-1 preparation. In both cases studied (enzyme with thr
ee bound nucleotides and enzyme with four bound nucleotides), the bind
ing is accompanied by the exchange of one tightly-bound adenine nucleo
tide and nearly complete inhibition of the ATPase activity upon UV ill
umination. In both cases the ADP-analogue binds at a high-affinity cat
alytic site, replacing a bound nucleotide. The apparent K-D value for
the exchange equals 25-30 mu M, but the newly bound ligand does not di
ssociate. With F-1 containing 3 bound nucleotides NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP is a
ble to bind to a second high-affinity site as well. This binding induc
es already in the absence of illumination 45% inhibition of the ATPase
activity. The additionally bound molecule does not exchange within a
short period of turnover with Mg-ATP. Therefore it has to be bound at
a slowly exchangeable non-catalytic site, with a regulatory influence
on the activity of the enzyme. Binding of NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP to this non-
catalytic site is influenced by the presence of Mg2+ or EDTA: tight bi
nding requires Mg2+ and in the absence of Mg2+ and presence of EDTA th
e ligand is removed from this site relatively easily, just like ADP. T
he presence of EDTA instead of Mg2+ lowers the measured affinity of th
is site for NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP with a factor 5. Kinetic measurements afte
r an incubation of F-1 with NAP(3)-2N(3)ADP show a decrease of the V-m
ax with ATP as substrate, without effect on the two measured K-m value
s. With ITP as substrate, however, incubation of F-1 with NAP(3)-2N(3)
ADP results in an increase of the K-m values, without effect on the V-
max. Comparison of our data with the literature shows that this non-ca
talytic site is not the site responsible for hysteretic inhibition by
ADP. We conclude that this latter form of inhibition is observed when
ADP or a suitable analogue is bound at the first (potentially catalyti
c) beta-site, in disagreement with the conclusions of Jault and Alliso
n (J. Biol. Chem. 269 (1994) 319-325).