Ym. Milgrom et al., BI-SITE ACTIVATION OCCURS WITH THE NATIVE AND NUCLEOTIDE-DEPLETED MITOCHONDRIAL F1-ATPASE, Biochemical journal, 330, 1998, pp. 1037-1043
Experiments are reported on the uni-site catalysis and the transition
from uni-site to multi-site catalysis with bovine heart mitochondrial
F-1-ATPase. The very slow uni-site ATP hydrolysis is shown to occur wi
thout tightly bound nucleotides present and with or without P-i in the
buffer. Measurements of the transition to higher rates and the amount
of bound ATP committed to hydrolysis as the ATP concentration is incr
eased at different fixed enzyme concentrations give evidence that the
filling of a second site can initiate near maximal turnover rates. The
y provide rate constant information, and show that an apparent K-m for
a second site of about 2 mu M and V-max of 10 s(-1), as suggested by
others, is not operative. Careful initial velocity measurements also e
liminate other suggested K-m values and are consistent with bi-site ac
tivation to near maximal hydrolysis rates, with a K-m of about 130 mu
M and V-max of about 700 s(-1). However, the results do not eliminate
the possibility of additional 'hidden' K-m values with similar V-max:
K-m ratios. Recent data on competition between TNP-ATP and ATP reveale
d a third catalytic site for ATP in the millimolar concentration range
. This result, and those reported in the present paper, allow the conc
lusion that the mitochondrial F-1-ATPase can attain near maximal activ
ity in bi-site catalysis. Our data also add to the evidence that a rec
ent claim, that the mitochondrial F-1-ATPase does not show catalytic s
ite cooperativity, is invalid.