Analysis of ionic channels by a flash spectrophotometric technique applicable to thylakoid membranes: CF, the proton channel of the chloroplast ATP synthase, and, for comparison, gramicidin.

Autor: Lill, Holger, Althoff, Gerd, Junge, Wolfgang
Zdroj: Journal of Membrane Biology; 1987, Vol. 98 Issue 1, p69-78, 10p
Abstrakt: We previously introduced a flash spectrophotometric method to analyze proton conduction by CF in vesicles derived from thylakoid membranes (H. Lill, S. Engelbrecht, G. Schönknecht & W. Junge, 1986, Eur. J. Biochem. 160:627-634). The unit conductance of CF, as revealed by this technique, was orders of magnitude higher than that theoretically expected for a hydrogen-bonded chain. We scrutinized the validity of this method. Small vesicles were derived from thylakoids by EDTA treatment. The intrinsic electric generators in the membrane were stimulated by short flashes of light and the relaxation of the voltage via ionic channels was measured through electrochromic absorption changes of intrinsic pigments. The voltage decay was stimulated by a statistical model. As the vesicle-size distribution had only a minor influence, the simulation required only two fit parameters, the first proportional to the unit conductance of an active channel G, and the second denoting the average number of active channels per vesiclen. This technique was applied to CF, the proton channel of the chloroplast ATP synthase, and to gramicidin, serving as a standard. For both channels we found the above two fit parameters physically meaningful. They could be independently varied in predictable wasy, i.e.n by addition of known inhibitors of F-type proton channels and G via the temperature. for gramicidin, the unit conductance (2.7 pS) was within the range described in the literature. This established the competence of this method for studies on the mechanism of proton conduction by CF, whose conductance so far has not been accessible to other, more conventional approaches. The time-averaged unit conductance of CF was about 1 pS, equivalent to the turnover of 6×10 H/(CF·sec) at 100 mV driving force. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index