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Regulation of the mammalian-brain V-ATPase through ultraslow mode-switching

Author

Listed:
  • Eleftherios Kosmidis

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Christopher G. Shuttle

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Julia Preobraschenski

    (Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
    University Medical Center
    University of Göttingen)

  • Marcelo Ganzella

    (Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences)

  • Peter J. Johnson

    (University of Copenhagen
    University of Manchester)

  • Salome Veshaguri

    (University of Copenhagen
    Novozymes A/S)

  • Jesper Holmkvist

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Mads P. Møller

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Orestis Marantos

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Frank Marcoline

    (University of California San Francisco)

  • Michael Grabe

    (University of California San Francisco)

  • Jesper L. Pedersen

    (University of Copenhagen)

  • Reinhard Jahn

    (Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences)

  • Dimitrios Stamou

    (University of Copenhagen)

Abstract

Vacuolar-type adenosine triphosphatases (V-ATPases)1–3 are electrogenic rotary mechanoenzymes structurally related to F-type ATP synthases4,5. They hydrolyse ATP to establish electrochemical proton gradients for a plethora of cellular processes1,3. In neurons, the loading of all neurotransmitters into synaptic vesicles is energized by about one V-ATPase molecule per synaptic vesicle6,7. To shed light on this bona fide single-molecule biological process, we investigated electrogenic proton-pumping by single mammalian-brain V-ATPases in single synaptic vesicles. Here we show that V-ATPases do not pump continuously in time, as suggested by observing the rotation of bacterial homologues8 and assuming strict ATP–proton coupling. Instead, they stochastically switch between three ultralong-lived modes: proton-pumping, inactive and proton-leaky. Notably, direct observation of pumping revealed that physiologically relevant concentrations of ATP do not regulate the intrinsic pumping rate. ATP regulates V-ATPase activity through the switching probability of the proton-pumping mode. By contrast, electrochemical proton gradients regulate the pumping rate and the switching of the pumping and inactive modes. A direct consequence of mode-switching is all-or-none stochastic fluctuations in the electrochemical gradient of synaptic vesicles that would be expected to introduce stochasticity in proton-driven secondary active loading of neurotransmitters and may thus have important implications for neurotransmission. This work reveals and emphasizes the mechanistic and biological importance of ultraslow mode-switching.

Suggested Citation

  • Eleftherios Kosmidis & Christopher G. Shuttle & Julia Preobraschenski & Marcelo Ganzella & Peter J. Johnson & Salome Veshaguri & Jesper Holmkvist & Mads P. Møller & Orestis Marantos & Frank Marcoline , 2022. "Regulation of the mammalian-brain V-ATPase through ultraslow mode-switching," Nature, Nature, vol. 611(7937), pages 827-834, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:611:y:2022:i:7937:d:10.1038_s41586-022-05472-9
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05472-9
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