Yuh Hasimoto, Mitsuhiro Sugawa, Yoshihiro Nishiguchi, Fumihiro Aeba, Ayari Tagawa, Kenta Suga, Nobukiyo Tanaka, Hiroshi Ueno, Hiroki Yamashita, Ryuichi Yokota, Tomoko Masaike, Takayuki Nishizaka
Biophysical journal, Dec 21, 2022
F1-ATPase is a world's smallest biological rotary motor driven by ATP hydrolysis at three catalytic β subunits. The 120° rotational step of the central shaft γ consists of 80° substep driven by ATP binding and a subsequent 40° substep. In order to correlate timing of ATP cleavage at a specific catalytic site with a rotary angle, we designed a new F1-ATPase from thermophilic Bacillus PS3 carrying β(E190D/F414E/F420E) mutations which cause extremely slow rates of both ATP cleavage and ATP binding. We produced an F1 molecule which consists of one mutant β and two wild type βs (hybrid F1). As a result, the new hybrid F1 showed two pausing angles which are separated by 200°. They are attributable to two slowed reaction steps in the mutated β, thus providing the direct evidence that ATP cleavage occurs at 200° rather than 80° subsequent to ATP binding at 0°. This scenario resolves the long-standing unclarified issue in the chemomechanical coupling scheme and give insights into the mechanism of driving unidirectional rotation.