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Recent
Articles
Soteropoulos P, Valiakhmetov A, Kashiwazaki R, Perlin DS
Helical stalk segments S4 and S5 of the plasma membrane
H+-ATPase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae are optimized to impact
catalytic site environment.
J Biol Chem 2001 May 11;276(19):16265-70
PMID: 11278840
The stalk segments of P-type ion-translocating enzymes are presumed
to play important roles in energy coupling. In this work, stalk
segments S4 and S5 of the yeast H(+)-ATPase were examined for helical
character, optimal length, and segment orientation by a combination
of proline substitution, insertion/deletion mutagenesis, and second-site
suppressor analyses. The substitution of various residues for helix-disrupting
proline in both S4 (L353P,L353G; A354P; and G371P) and S5 (D676P
and I684P) resulted in highly defective or inactive enzymes supporting
the importance of helical character and/or the maintenance of essential
interactions. The contiguous helical nature of transmembrane segment
M5 and stalk element S5 was explored and found to be favorable,
although not essential. The deletion or addition of one or more
amino acids at positions Ala(354) in S4 and Asp(676) in S5, which
were intended to either rotate helical faces or extend/reduce the
length of helical segments, resulted in enzyme destabilization that
abolished most enzyme assembly. Second-site suppressor mutations
were obtained to primary site mutations G371A (S4) and D676G (S5)
and were analyzed with a molecular structure model of the H(+)-ATPase.
Primary site mutations were predicted to alter the site of phosphorylation
either directly or indirectly. The suppressor mutations either directly
changed packing around the primary site or altered the environment
of the site of phosphorylation. Overall, these data support the
view that stalk segments S4 and S5 of the H(+)-ATPase are helical
elements that are optimized for length and interactions with other
stalk elements and can influence the phosphorylation domain.

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