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Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus

The V(1)- and F(1)- rotary ATPases contain a rotor that rotates against a catalytic A(3)B(3) or α(3)β(3) stator. The rotor F(1)-γ or V(1)-DF is composed of both anti-parallel coiled coil and globular-loop parts. The bacterial flagellar type III export apparatus contains a V(1)/F(1)-like ATPase ring...

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Autores principales: Kishikawa, Jun-ichi, Ibuki, Tatsuya, Nakamura, Shuichi, Nakanishi, Astuko, Minamino, Tohru, Miyata, Tomoko, Namba, Keiichi, Konno, Hiroki, Ueno, Hiroshi, Imada, Katsumi, Yokoyama, Ken
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3665681/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23724081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064695
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author Kishikawa, Jun-ichi
Ibuki, Tatsuya
Nakamura, Shuichi
Nakanishi, Astuko
Minamino, Tohru
Miyata, Tomoko
Namba, Keiichi
Konno, Hiroki
Ueno, Hiroshi
Imada, Katsumi
Yokoyama, Ken
author_facet Kishikawa, Jun-ichi
Ibuki, Tatsuya
Nakamura, Shuichi
Nakanishi, Astuko
Minamino, Tohru
Miyata, Tomoko
Namba, Keiichi
Konno, Hiroki
Ueno, Hiroshi
Imada, Katsumi
Yokoyama, Ken
author_sort Kishikawa, Jun-ichi
collection PubMed
description The V(1)- and F(1)- rotary ATPases contain a rotor that rotates against a catalytic A(3)B(3) or α(3)β(3) stator. The rotor F(1)-γ or V(1)-DF is composed of both anti-parallel coiled coil and globular-loop parts. The bacterial flagellar type III export apparatus contains a V(1)/F(1)-like ATPase ring structure composed of FliI(6) homo-hexamer and FliJ which adopts an anti-parallel coiled coil structure without the globular-loop part. Here we report that FliJ of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium shows a rotor like function in Thermus thermophilus A(3)B(3) based on both biochemical and structural analysis. Single molecular analysis indicates that an anti-parallel coiled-coil structure protein (FliJ structure protein) functions as a rotor in A(3)B(3). A rotary ATPase possessing an F(1)-γ-like protein generated by fusion of the D and F subunits of V(1) rotates, suggesting F(1)-γ could be the result of a fusion of the genes encoding two separate rotor subunits. Together with sequence comparison among the globular part proteins, the data strongly suggest that the rotor domains of the rotary ATPases and the flagellar export apparatus share a common evolutionary origin.
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spelling pubmed-36656812013-05-30 Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus Kishikawa, Jun-ichi Ibuki, Tatsuya Nakamura, Shuichi Nakanishi, Astuko Minamino, Tohru Miyata, Tomoko Namba, Keiichi Konno, Hiroki Ueno, Hiroshi Imada, Katsumi Yokoyama, Ken PLoS One Research Article The V(1)- and F(1)- rotary ATPases contain a rotor that rotates against a catalytic A(3)B(3) or α(3)β(3) stator. The rotor F(1)-γ or V(1)-DF is composed of both anti-parallel coiled coil and globular-loop parts. The bacterial flagellar type III export apparatus contains a V(1)/F(1)-like ATPase ring structure composed of FliI(6) homo-hexamer and FliJ which adopts an anti-parallel coiled coil structure without the globular-loop part. Here we report that FliJ of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium shows a rotor like function in Thermus thermophilus A(3)B(3) based on both biochemical and structural analysis. Single molecular analysis indicates that an anti-parallel coiled-coil structure protein (FliJ structure protein) functions as a rotor in A(3)B(3). A rotary ATPase possessing an F(1)-γ-like protein generated by fusion of the D and F subunits of V(1) rotates, suggesting F(1)-γ could be the result of a fusion of the genes encoding two separate rotor subunits. Together with sequence comparison among the globular part proteins, the data strongly suggest that the rotor domains of the rotary ATPases and the flagellar export apparatus share a common evolutionary origin. Public Library of Science 2013-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3665681/ /pubmed/23724081 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064695 Text en © 2013 Kishikawa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kishikawa, Jun-ichi
Ibuki, Tatsuya
Nakamura, Shuichi
Nakanishi, Astuko
Minamino, Tohru
Miyata, Tomoko
Namba, Keiichi
Konno, Hiroki
Ueno, Hiroshi
Imada, Katsumi
Yokoyama, Ken
Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title_full Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title_fullStr Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title_full_unstemmed Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title_short Common Evolutionary Origin for the Rotor Domain of Rotary Atpases and Flagellar Protein Export Apparatus
title_sort common evolutionary origin for the rotor domain of rotary atpases and flagellar protein export apparatus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3665681/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23724081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064695
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