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3.A.2.2.3
H+-translocating V-type ATPase. The d-subunit couples ATP hydrolysis to H+ transport (Owegi et al., 2006).  The a subunit (Vph1p) most likely has an 8 TMS topology (Kartner et al. 2013; Knight and Behm 2012).  Structures for three rotational states show ten proteolipid subunits in the c-ring, setting the ATP:H+ ratio for proton pumping. Long tilted TMSs in the a-subunit interact with the c-ring.  V-ATPase's membrane sector, Vo, has been implicated in functions including membrane fusion and neurotransmitter release. Couoh-Cardel et al. 2016 reported that the purified V-ATPase c subunit ring (c-ring) forms dimers mediated by the c subunits' cytoplasmic loops. Electrophysiological measurements of the c-ring reconstituted into a planar lipid bilayer revealed a large unitary conductance of ~8.3 nS.  A role of the c-ring in membrane fusion and neuronal communication was suggested (Couoh-Cardel et al. 2016).
   The three different maps reveal the conformational changes that occur to couple rotation in the symmetry-mismatched soluble catalytic region to the membrane-bound proton-translocating region. Almost all of the subunits undergo conformational changes during the transitions between these three rotational states (Zhao et al. 2015). The structures of these states provide direct evidence that deformation during rotation enables the smooth transmission of power through rotary ATPases. Increases in glucose stimulate V-ATPase assembly and activity while glucose deprivation triggers rapid V-ATPase disassembly and inactivation in yeast. However, the opposite phenomenon is observed in mammalian cells, specifically that V-ATPase assembly and activation increases when glucose is lost (Parra and Hayek 2018).
   The 3.5 Å resolution cryoEM structure of the lipid nanodisc-reconstituted Vo proton channel, captured in a physiologically relevant autoinhibited state, revealing the residues that constitute the proton pathway at the interface of the proteolipid ring and subunit a has been solved (Roh et al. 2018). The chemical basis of transmembrane proton transport was proposed. Roh et al. 2018 discovered that the C terminus of the assembly factor Voa1 (TC# 9.B.206.2.1)) is an integral component of the mature Vo. Voa1's C-terminal transmembrane alpha helix is bound inside the proteolipid ring, where it contributes to the stability of the complex. The structure rationalizes possible mechanisms by which mutations in human Vo can result in disease phenotypes (Roh et al. 2018). The cytosolic N-terminal domain of the V-ATPase a-subunits is a regulatory hub targeted by multiple signals (Tuli and Kane 2023).     An arginine residue (Arg-735) in transmembrane helix 7 (TMS7) of subunit a of the yeast ATPase is known to be essential for proton translocation. Arginine residues are usually assumed to 'snorkel' toward the protein surface when exposed to a hydrophobic environment. However, Hohlweg et al. 2018 obtained evidence for the formation of a transient, membrane-embedded cation-π interaction in TM7 between Arg-735 and two highly conserved nearby aromatic residues, Tyr-733 and Trp-737. They proposed a mechanism by which the transient, membrane-embedded cation-π complex provides the necessary energy to keep the charged side chain of Arg-735 within the hydrophobic membrane. Such cation-π interactions may define a general mechanism to retain charged amino acids in a hydrophobic membrane environment (Hohlweg et al. 2018). A  2.7-A cryo-EM structure of the yeast Vo proton channel revealed the location of ordered water molecules along the proton path, details of specific protein-lipid interactions, and the architecture of the membrane scaffold protein (Roh et al. 2020) as well as a state of Vo showing the c-ring rotated by ~14 degrees. Two rotary states are in thermal equilibrium and depict how the protonation state of essential glutamic acid residues couples water-mediated proton transfer with c-ring rotation. Resuts suggest a mechanism for inhibition of passive proton transport as observed for free Vo that is generated as a result of V-ATPase regulation by reversible disassembly in vivo (Roh et al. 2020). Vacuolar H+-ATPase dysfunction rescues intralumenal vesicle cargo sorting in yeast lacking PI(3,5)P2 or Doa4 (Wilson et al. 2021). The V-ATPase a-subunit is a two-domain protein containing a C-terminal transmembrane domain responsible for proton transport and an N-terminal cytosolic domain that is a regulatory hub, integrating environmental inputs to regulate assembly, localization, and V-ATPase activity. S. cerevisiae encodes two organelle-specific a-isoforms, Stv1 in the Golgi and Vph1 in the vacuole (Tuli and Kane 2023). The significance of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and V-ATPase for growth and pathogenicity in pathogenic fungi has been discussed (Yang and Peng 2023).

Accession Number:P17255
Protein Name:VMA1 aka VATA aka TFP1 aka CLS8 aka YDL185W aka D1286 aka VDE
Length:1071
Molecular Weight:118637.00
Species:Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Baker's yeast) [4932]
Location1 / Topology2 / Orientation3: Endomembrane system1
Substrate hydron

Cross database links:

DIP: DIP-2293N
RefSeq: NP_010096.1   
Entrez Gene ID: 851342   
Pfam: PF00006    PF00306    PF02874   
KEGG: sce:YDL185W   

Gene Ontology

GO:0012505 C:endomembrane system
GO:0000329 C:fungal-type vacuole membrane
GO:0000221 C:vacuolar proton-transporting V-type ATPase,...
GO:0005524 F:ATP binding
GO:0003677 F:DNA binding
GO:0004520 F:endodeoxyribonuclease activity
GO:0046933 F:hydrogen ion transporting ATP synthase acti...
GO:0005515 F:protein binding
GO:0046961 F:proton-transporting ATPase activity, rotati...
GO:0015986 P:ATP synthesis coupled proton transport
GO:0044267 P:cellular protein metabolic process
GO:0016539 P:intein-mediated protein splicing
GO:0006314 P:intron homing
GO:0007035 P:vacuolar acidification

References (21)

[1] “Molecular structure of a gene, VMA1, encoding the catalytic subunit of H(+)-translocating adenosine triphosphatase from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.”  Hirata R.et.al.   2139027
[2] “New open reading frames, one of which is similar to the nifV gene of Azotobacter vinelandii, found on a 12.5 kbp fragment of chromosome IV of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.”  Verhasselt P.et.al.   8533471
[3] “The nucleotide sequence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome IV.”  Jacq C.et.al.   9169867
[4] “Protein phosphatase 2A in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: effects on cell growth and bud morphogenesis.”  Ronne H.et.al.   1656215
[5] “Protein-splicing reaction via a thiazolidine intermediate: crystal structure of the VMA1-derived endonuclease bearing the N and C-terminal propeptides.”  Mizutani R.et.al.   11884132
[6] “A dominant trifluoperazine resistance gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has homology with F0F1 ATP synthase and confers calcium-sensitive growth.”  Shih C.K.et.al.   2905423
[7] “Protein splicing converts the yeast TFP1 gene product to the 69-kD subunit of the vacuolar H(+)-adenosine triphosphatase.”  Kane P.M.et.al.   2146742
[8] “Mutations at the putative junction sites of the yeast VMA1 protein, the catalytic subunit of the vacuolar membrane H(+)-ATPase, inhibit its processing by protein splicing.”  Hirata R.et.al.   1417861
[9] “Protein splicing of the yeast TFP1 intervening protein sequence: a model for self-excision.”  Cooper A.A.et.al.   8508780
[10] “Homing of a DNA endonuclease gene by meiotic gene conversion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.”  Gimble F.S.et.al.   1534148
[11] “Skp1 forms multiple protein complexes, including RAVE, a regulator of V-ATPase assembly.”  Seol J.H.et.al.   11283612
[12] “Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeast.”  Huh W.-K.et.al.   14562095
[13] “Global analysis of protein expression in yeast.”  Ghaemmaghami S.et.al.   14562106
[14] “Homing in on an endosymbiotic endonuclease.”  Grivell L.A.et.al.   15335920
[15] “Quantitative phosphoproteomics applied to the yeast pheromone signaling pathway.”  Gruhler A.et.al.   15665377
[16] “Analysis of phosphorylation sites on proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae by electron transfer dissociation (ETD) mass spectrometry.”  Chi A.et.al.   17287358
[17] “A multidimensional chromatography technology for in-depth phosphoproteome analysis.”  Albuquerque C.P.et.al.   18407956
[18] “Crystal structure of PI-SceI, a homing endonuclease with protein splicing activity.”  Duan X.et.al.   9160747
[19] “Probing the structure of the PI-SceI-DNA complex by affinity cleavage and affinity photocross-linking.”  Hu D.et.al.   10644733
[20] “Structural insights into the protein splicing mechanism of PI-SceI.”  Poland B.W.et.al.   10828056
[21] “High resolution crystal structure of domain I of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae homing endonuclease PI-SceI.”  Werner E.et.al.   12235380
Structure:
1DFA   1EF0   1GPP   1JVA   1LWS   1LWT   1UM2   1VDE   3J9T   3J9U   [...more]

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FASTA formatted sequence
1:	MAGAIENARK EIKRISLEDH AESEYGAIYS VSGPVVIAEN MIGCAMYELV KVGHDNLVGE 
61:	VIRIDGDKAT IQVYEETAGL TVGDPVLRTG KPLSVELGPG LMETIYDGIQ RPLKAIKEES 
121:	QSIYIPRGID TPALDRTIKW QFTPGKFQVG DHISGGDIYG SVFENSLISS HKILLPPRSR 
181:	GTITWIAPAG EYTLDEKILE VEFDGKKSDF TLYHTWPVRV PRPVTEKLSA DYPLLTGQRV 
241:	LDALFPCVQG GTTCIPGAFG CGKTVISQSL SKYSNSDAII YVGCFAKGTN VLMADGSIEC 
301:	IENIEVGNKV MGKDGRPREV IKLPRGRETM YSVVQKSQHR AHKSDSSREV PELLKFTCNA 
361:	THELVVRTPR SVRRLSRTIK GVEYFEVITF EMGQKKAPDG RIVELVKEVS KSYPISEGPE 
421:	RANELVESYR KASNKAYFEW TIEARDLSLL GSHVRKATYQ TYAPILYEND HFFDYMQKSK 
481:	FHLTIEGPKV LAYLLGLWIG DGLSDRATFS VDSRDTSLME RVTEYAEKLN LCAEYKDRKE 
541:	PQVAKTVNLY SKVVRGNGIR NNLNTENPLW DAIVGLGFLK DGVKNIPSFL STDNIGTRET 
601:	FLAGLIDSDG YVTDEHGIKA TIKTIHTSVR DGLVSLARSL GLVVSVNAEP AKVDMNGTKH 
661:	KISYAIYMSG GDVLLNVLSK CAGSKKFRPA PAAAFARECR GFYFELQELK EDDYYGITLS 
721:	DDSDHQFLLA NQVVVHNCGE RGNEMAEVLM EFPELYTEMS GTKEPIMKRT TLVANTSNMP 
781:	VAAREASIYT GITLAEYFRD QGKNVSMIAD SSSRWAEALR EISGRLGEMP ADQGFPAYLG 
841:	AKLASFYERA GKAVALGSPD RTGSVSIVAA VSPAGGDFSD PVTTATLGIT QVFWGLDKKL 
901:	AQRKHFPSIN TSVSYSKYTN VLNKFYDSNY PEFPVLRDRM KEILSNAEEL EQVVQLVGKS 
961:	ALSDSDKITL DVATLIKEDF LQQNGYSTYD AFCPIWKTFD MMRAFISYHD EAQKAVANGA 
1021:	NWSKLADSTG DVKHAVSSSK FFEPSRGEKE VHGEFEKLLS TMQERFAEST D