Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species

In this study, the ATP synthase of Ignicoccus hospitalis was purified, characterized, and structurally compared to the respective enzymes of the other Ignicoccus species, to shed light on energy conservation in this unique group of archaea. The crenarchaeal genus Ignicoccus comprises three described...

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Published in:Journal of Bacteriology
Main Authors: Kreuter, Lydia J., Weinfurtner, Andrea, Ziegler, Alexander, Weigl, Julia, Hoffmann, Jan, Morgner, Nina, Müller, Volker, Huber, Harald, Metcalf, William W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY 2019
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Online Access:https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/48847/
https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00510-18
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spelling ftunivregepub:oai:epub.uni-regensburg.de:48847 2023-05-15T16:52:10+02:00 Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species Kreuter, Lydia J. Weinfurtner, Andrea Ziegler, Alexander Weigl, Julia Hoffmann, Jan Morgner, Nina Müller, Volker Huber, Harald Metcalf, William W. 2019 https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/48847/ https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00510-18 unknown AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY Kreuter, Lydia J., Weinfurtner, Andrea, Ziegler, Alexander, Weigl, Julia, Hoffmann, Jan, Morgner, Nina, Müller, Volker, Huber, Harald und Metcalf, William W. (2019) Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species. Journal of Bacteriology 201 (7). 570 Biowissenschaften Biologie ddc:570 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Artikel doc-type:article NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftunivregepub https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00510-18 2022-08-22T13:18:20Z In this study, the ATP synthase of Ignicoccus hospitalis was purified, characterized, and structurally compared to the respective enzymes of the other Ignicoccus species, to shed light on energy conservation in this unique group of archaea. The crenarchaeal genus Ignicoccus comprises three described species, i.e., I. hospitalis and Ignicoccus islandicus from hot marine sediments near Iceland and Ignicoccus pacificus from a hydrothermal vent system in the Pacific Ocean. This genus is unique among all archaea due to the unusual cell envelope, consisting of two membranes that enclose a large intermembrane compartment (IMC). I. hospitalis is the best studied member of this genus, mainly because it is the only known host for the potentially parasitic archaeon Nanoarchaeum equitans. I. hospitalis grows chemolithoautotrophically, and its sole energy-yielding reaction is the reduction of elemental sulfur with molecular hydrogen, forming large amounts of hydrogen sulfide. This reaction generates an electrochemical gradient, which is used by the ATP synthase, located in the outer cellular membrane, to generate ATP inside the IMC. The genome of I. hospitalis encodes nine subunits of an A-type ATP synthase, which we could identify in the purified complex. Although the maximal in vitro activity of the I. hospitalis enzyme was measured around pH 6, the optimal stability of the A(1)A(O) complex seemed to be at pH 9. Interestingly, the soluble A(1) subcomplexes of the different Ignicoccus species exhibited significant differences in their apparent molecular masses in native electrophoresis, although their behaviors in gel filtration and chromatography-mass spectrometry were very similar. IMPORTANCE The Crenarchaeota represent one of the major phyla within the Archaea domain. This study describes the successful purification of a crenarchaeal ATP synthase. To date, all information about A-type ATP synthases is from euryarchaeal enzymes. The fact that it has not been possible to purify this enzyme complex from a member of the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland University of Regensburg Publication Server Pacific Journal of Bacteriology 201 7
institution Open Polar
collection University of Regensburg Publication Server
op_collection_id ftunivregepub
language unknown
topic 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
spellingShingle 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
Kreuter, Lydia J.
Weinfurtner, Andrea
Ziegler, Alexander
Weigl, Julia
Hoffmann, Jan
Morgner, Nina
Müller, Volker
Huber, Harald
Metcalf, William W.
Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
topic_facet 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
description In this study, the ATP synthase of Ignicoccus hospitalis was purified, characterized, and structurally compared to the respective enzymes of the other Ignicoccus species, to shed light on energy conservation in this unique group of archaea. The crenarchaeal genus Ignicoccus comprises three described species, i.e., I. hospitalis and Ignicoccus islandicus from hot marine sediments near Iceland and Ignicoccus pacificus from a hydrothermal vent system in the Pacific Ocean. This genus is unique among all archaea due to the unusual cell envelope, consisting of two membranes that enclose a large intermembrane compartment (IMC). I. hospitalis is the best studied member of this genus, mainly because it is the only known host for the potentially parasitic archaeon Nanoarchaeum equitans. I. hospitalis grows chemolithoautotrophically, and its sole energy-yielding reaction is the reduction of elemental sulfur with molecular hydrogen, forming large amounts of hydrogen sulfide. This reaction generates an electrochemical gradient, which is used by the ATP synthase, located in the outer cellular membrane, to generate ATP inside the IMC. The genome of I. hospitalis encodes nine subunits of an A-type ATP synthase, which we could identify in the purified complex. Although the maximal in vitro activity of the I. hospitalis enzyme was measured around pH 6, the optimal stability of the A(1)A(O) complex seemed to be at pH 9. Interestingly, the soluble A(1) subcomplexes of the different Ignicoccus species exhibited significant differences in their apparent molecular masses in native electrophoresis, although their behaviors in gel filtration and chromatography-mass spectrometry were very similar. IMPORTANCE The Crenarchaeota represent one of the major phyla within the Archaea domain. This study describes the successful purification of a crenarchaeal ATP synthase. To date, all information about A-type ATP synthases is from euryarchaeal enzymes. The fact that it has not been possible to purify this enzyme complex from a member of the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kreuter, Lydia J.
Weinfurtner, Andrea
Ziegler, Alexander
Weigl, Julia
Hoffmann, Jan
Morgner, Nina
Müller, Volker
Huber, Harald
Metcalf, William W.
author_facet Kreuter, Lydia J.
Weinfurtner, Andrea
Ziegler, Alexander
Weigl, Julia
Hoffmann, Jan
Morgner, Nina
Müller, Volker
Huber, Harald
Metcalf, William W.
author_sort Kreuter, Lydia J.
title Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
title_short Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
title_full Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
title_fullStr Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
title_full_unstemmed Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species
title_sort purification of a crenarchaeal atp synthase in the light of the unique bioenergetics of ignicoccus species
publisher AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
publishDate 2019
url https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/48847/
https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00510-18
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Kreuter, Lydia J., Weinfurtner, Andrea, Ziegler, Alexander, Weigl, Julia, Hoffmann, Jan, Morgner, Nina, Müller, Volker, Huber, Harald und Metcalf, William W. (2019) Purification of a Crenarchaeal ATP Synthase in the Light of the Unique Bioenergetics of Ignicoccus Species. Journal of Bacteriology 201 (7).
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00510-18
container_title Journal of Bacteriology
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