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Structural Asymmetry and Kinetic Limping of Single Rotary F-ATP Synthases.

F-ATP synthases use proton flow through the FO domain to synthesize ATP in the F₁ domain. In Escherichia coli , the enzyme consists of rotor subunits γε c 10 and stator subunits (αβ)₃δ ab ₂. Subunits c 10 or (αβ)₃ alone are rotationally symmetric. However, symmetry is broken by the b ₂ homodimer, which together with subunit δ a , forms a single eccentric stalk connecting the membrane embedded FO domain with the soluble F₁ domain, and the central rotating and curved stalk composed of subunit γε. Although each of the three catalytic binding sites in (αβ)₃ catalyzes the same set of partial reactions in the time average, they might not be fully equivalent at any moment, because the structural symmetry is broken by contact with b ₂δ in F₁ and with b ₂ a in FO . We monitored the enzyme's rotary progression during ATP hydrolysis by three single-molecule techniques: fluorescence video-microscopy with attached actin filaments, Förster resonance energy transfer between pairs of fluorescence probes, and a polarization assay using gold nanorods. We found that one dwell in the three-stepped rotary progression lasting longer than the other two by a factor of up to 1.6. This effect of the structural asymmetry is small due to the internal elastic coupling.

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