The 21st Annual Meeting of the Protein Science Society of Japan

Presentation information

Workshop

[WS4] APPA/PSSJ Joint Workshop Toward International Cooperation in Protein Science

Thu. Jun 17, 2021 9:45 AM - 12:15 PM Channel 2

Organizers: Masafumi Yohda (Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology), James R. Ketudat Cairns (Suranaree Univ. of Technology)

10:04 AM - 10:18 AM

[WS4-02] The High-throughput Genetically Directed Crosslinking Analysis Reveals the Physiological Relevance of the ATP Synthase “Inserted” State

Zengyi Chang (State Key Laboratory of Protein and Plant Gene Research, School of Life Sciences, Center for Protein Science, Peking University)

ATP synthase, a highly conserved protein complex that has a subunit composition of α3β3γδεab2c8-15 for the bacterial enzyme, is a key player in supplying energy to living organisms. This protein complex consists of a peripheral F1 sector (α3β3γδε) and a membrane-integrated Fo sector (ab2c8-15). Structural analyses of the isolated protein components revealed that, remarkably, the C-terminal domain of its ε-subunit seems to adopt two dramatically different structures, but the physiological relevance of this conformational change remains largely unknown. In an attempt to decipher this, we developed a high-throughput in vivo protein photocrosslinking analysis pipeline based on the introduction of the unnatural amino acid into the target protein via the scarless genome-targeted site-directed mutagenesis technique, and probing the crosslinked products via the high-throughput polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis technique. Employing this pipeline, we examined the interactions involving the C-terminal helix of the ε-subunit in cells living under a variety of experimental conditions. These studies enabled us to uncover that the bacterial ATP synthase exists as an equilibrium between the “inserted” and “non-inserted” state in cells, maintaining a moderate but significant level of net ATP synthesis when shifting to the former upon exposing to unfavorable energetically stressful conditions. Such a mechanism allows the bacterial ATP synthases to proportionally and instantly switch between two reversible functional states in responding to changing environmental conditions. Importantly, this high-throughput approach could allow us to decipher the physiological relevance of protein-protein interactions identified under in vitro conditions or to unveil novel physiological context-dependent protein-protein interactions that are unknown before.