A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Catalytic asymmetry in homodimeric h+‐pumping membrane pyrophosphatase demonstrated by non‐hydrolyzable pyrophosphate analogs




AuthorsAnashkin Viktor A., Malinen Anssi M., Bogachev Alexander V., Baykov Alexander A.

PublisherMDPI

Publication year2021

JournalInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences

Journal name in sourceInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences

Article number9820

Volume22

Issue18

eISSN1422-0067

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22189820

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/67425371


Abstract

Membrane-bound inorganic pyrophosphatase (mPPase) resembles the F-ATPase in catalyzing polyphosphate-energized H+ and Na+ transport across lipid membranes, but differs structurally and mechanistically. Homodimeric mPPase likely uses a “direct coupling” mechanism, in which the proton generated from the water nucleophile at the entrance to the ion conductance channel is transported across the membrane or triggers Na+ transport. The structural aspects of this mechanism, including subunit cooperation, are still poorly understood. Using a refined enzyme assay, we examined the inhibition of K+-dependent H+-transporting mPPase from Desulfitobacterium hafniensee by three non-hydrolyzable PPi analogs (imidodiphosphate and C-substituted bisphosphonates). The kinetic data demonstrated negative cooperativity in inhibitor binding to two active sites, and reduced active site performance when the inhibitor or substrate occupied the other active site. The nonequivalence of active sites in PPi hydrolysis in terms of the Michaelis constant vanished at a low (0.1 mM) concentration of Mg2+ (essential cofactor). The replacement of K+, the second metal cofactor, by Na+ increased the substrate and inhibitor binding cooperativity. The detergent-solubilized form of mPPase exhibited similar active site nonequivalence in PPi hydrolysis. Our findings support the notion that the mPPase mechanism combines Mitchell’s direct coupling with conformational coupling to catalyze cation transport across the membrane.


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