Assembly and Regulation of the Yeast Vacuolar H+-ATPase
Open Access
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 203 (1) , 81-87
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.203.1.81
Abstract
The yeast vacuolar H+ -ATPase (V-ATPase) consists of a complex of peripheral subunits containing the ATP binding sites, termed the V1 sector, attached to a complex of membrane subunits containing the proton pore, termed the Vo sector. Interaction between the V1 and Vo sectors is essential for ATP-driven proton transport, and this interaction is manipulated in vivo as a means of regulating V-ATPase activity. When yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells are deprived of glucose for as little as 5 min, up to 75 % of the assembled V-ATPase complexes are disassembled into cytoplasmic V1 sectors and membrane-bound Vo sectors. Remarkably, this disassembly is completely reversible. Restoration of glucose to the growth medium results in quantitative reassembly of the disassembled complexes in as little as 5 min, even in the absence of any new protein synthesis. Cells also appear to regulate the extent of V1 Vo assembly on a long-term basis. Yeast cells grown for extended periods in a poor carbon source contain a high proportion of free V1 and Vo sectors, and these sectors remain poised for reassembly when growth conditions improve. Parallel experiments on the Manduca sexta V-ATPase suggest that reversible disassembly may be a general regulatory mechanism for V-ATPases. These results imply that V-ATPases are surprisingly dynamic structures, and their unique ‘regulated instability’ raises a number of interesting physiological and structural questions. How are extracellular conditions such as carbon source communicated to V-ATPase complexes present on intracellular membranes? How are such major structural changes in the V-ATPase generated and how are V1 sectors ‘silenced’ in vivo to prevent unproductive hydrolysis of cytoplasmic ATP by the dissociated enzyme? We are addressing these questions using a combination of genetic and biochemical approaches.Keywords
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