1. Academic Validation
  2. An Inhibitor of the F1 subunit of ATP synthase (IF1) modulates the activity of angiostatin on the endothelial cell surface

An Inhibitor of the F1 subunit of ATP synthase (IF1) modulates the activity of angiostatin on the endothelial cell surface

  • J Biol Chem. 2005 Jan 21;280(3):1740-5. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M405947200.
Nick R Burwick 1 Miriam L Wahl Jun Fang Zhaoxi Zhong Tammy L Moser Bo Li Roderick A Capaldi Daniel J Kenan Salvatore V Pizzo
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Abstract

Angiostatin binds to endothelial cell (EC) surface F(1)-F(0) ATP Synthase, leading to inhibition of EC migration and proliferation during tumor angiogenesis. This has led to a search for angiostatin mimetics specific for this Enzyme. A naturally occurring protein that binds to the F1 subunit of ATP Synthase and blocks ATP hydrolysis in mitochondria is inhibitor of F1 (IF1). The present study explores the effect of IF1 on cell surface ATP Synthase. IF1 protein bound to purified F(1) ATP Synthase and inhibited F(1)-dependent ATP hydrolysis consistent with its reported activity in studies of mitochondria. Although exogenous IF1 did not inhibit ATP production on the surface of EC, it did conserve ATP on the cell surface, particularly at low extracellular pH. IF1 inhibited ATP hydrolysis but not ATP synthesis, in contrast to angiostatin, which inhibited both. In cell-based assays used to model angiogenesis in vitro, IF1 did not inhibit EC differentiation to form tubes and only slightly inhibited cell proliferation compared with angiostatin. From these data, we conclude that inhibition of ATP synthesis is necessary for an anti-angiogenic outcome in cell-based assays. We propose that IF1 is not an angiostatin mimetic, but it can serve a protective role for EC in the tumor microenvironment. This protection may be overridden in a concentration-dependent manner by angiostatin. In support of this hypothesis, we demonstrate that angiostatin blocks IF1 binding to ATP Synthase and abolishes its ability to conserve ATP. These data suggest that there is a relationship between the binding sites of IF1 and angiostatin on ATP Synthase and that IF1 could be employed to modulate angiogenesis.

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