Proton leakiness caused by cloned genes for the F0 sector of the proton-translocating ATPase of Escherichia coli: requirement for F1 genes.

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RESUMO

To study expression of uncG, the gene coding for the gamma subunit of the Escherichia coli proton-translocating ATPase, deletions were made in the intergenic region between uncA, the gene coding for the alpha subunit, and uncG. Two deletions which fused uncA and uncG coded for alpha-gamma fusion polypeptides which were synthesized well both in vitro and in vivo, demonstrating that uncG expression is normally controlled by nucleotides in the intergenic region. Multicopy plasmids carrying these fusion genes and the genes for the other subunits of the ATPase had a harmful effect on the growth of E. coli. The effect was overcome by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, indicating that the cells probably leaked protons. The deleterious effect was eliminated by making a nonpolar deletion in the upstream F0 gene uncB, or by cloning each of the uncA-uncG fusion genes onto a separate plasmid, removed from the F0 genes, thus demonstrating that the fusion genes were not primarily responsible for the proton permeability. A plasmid which carried F0 genes and the gene for the delta subunit caused deleterious proton leakiness in unc+ cells but not in cells from which the unc operon was deleted. The proton leakiness caused by these different plasmids was therefore due to the production of a leaky F0 proton channel and required the presence of F1 genes. The results support a model for ATPase assembly in which F1 genes or polypeptides are involved in the formation or opening of the F0 proton channel.

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