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1.
The molecular mechanism for proton conduction in the D-pathway of Cytochrome c Oxidase (CcO) is investigated through the free energy profile, i.e., potential of mean force (PMF) calculations of both the native enzyme and the N98D mutant. The multistate empirical valence bond (MS-EVB) model was applied to simulate the interaction of an excess proton with the channel environment. In the study of the wild type enzyme, the PMF reveals the previously proposed proton trap inside the channel; it also shows a high free energy barrier against the passage of proton at the entry of the channel, where two conserved asparagines (ASN80/98) may be essential for the gating of proton uptake. We also present data from an investigation of the N98D mutant, which has been previously shown to completely eliminate proton pumping but significantly enhance the oxidase activity in Rhodobacter sphaeroides. These results suggest that mutating Asn98 to negatively charged aspartate will create an unfavorable energy barrier sufficiently high to prevent the overall proton uptake through the D-pathway, whereas with a protonated aspartic acid the proton conduction was found to be accelerated. Plausible explanations for the origin of the uncoupling of proton pumping from the oxidase activity will be discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome oxidase catalyzes the reduction of O2 to water and conserves the considerable free energy available from this reaction in the form of a proton motive force. For each electron, one proton is electrogenically pumped across the membrane. Of particular interest is the mechanism by which the proton pump operates. Previous studies of the oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides have shown that all of the pumped protons enter the enzyme through the D channel and that a point mutant, N139D, in the D channel completely eliminates proton pumping without reducing oxidase activity. N139 is one of three asparagines near the entrance of the D channel, where there is a narrowing or neck, through which a single file of water molecules pass. In the current work, it is shown that replacement of a second asparagine in this region by an asparate, N207D, also decouples the proton pump without altering the oxidase activity of the enzyme. Previous studies demonstrated that the N139D mutant results in an increase in the apparent pKa of E286, a functionally critical residue that is located 20 A away from N139 at the opposite end of the D channel. In the current work, it is shown that the N207 mutation also increases the apparent pKa of E286. This finding reinforces the proposal that the elimination of proton pumping is the result of an increase of the apparent proton affinity of E286, which, in turn, prevents the timely proton transfer to a proton accepter group within the exit channel of the proton pump.  相似文献   

3.
The aspartate-132 in subunit I (D(I-132)) of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides is located on the cytoplasmic surface of the protein at the entry point of a proton-transfer pathway used for both substrate and pumped protons (D-pathway). Replacement of D(I-132) by its nonprotonatable analogue asparagine (DN(I-132)) has been shown to result in a reduced overall activity of the enzyme and impaired proton pumping. The results from this study show that during oxidation of the fully reduced enzyme the reaction was inhibited after formation of the oxo-ferryl (F) intermediate (tau congruent with 120 microseconds). In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, in the mutant enzyme formation of this intermediate was not associated with proton uptake from solution, which is the reason the DN(I-132) enzyme does not pump protons. The proton needed to form F was presumably taken from a protonatable group in the D-pathway (e.g., E(I-286)), which indicates that in the wild-type enzyme the proton transfer during F formation takes place in two steps: proton transfer from the group in the pathway is followed by faster reprotonation from the bulk solution, through D(I-132). Unlike the wild-type enzyme, in which F formation is coupled to internal electron transfer from CuA to heme a, in the DN(I-132) enzyme this electron transfer was uncoupled from formation of the F intermediate, which presumably is due to the impaired charge-compensating proton uptake from solution. In the presence of arachidonic acid which has been shown to stimulate the turnover activity of the DN(I-132) enzyme (Fetter et al. (1996) FEBS Lett. 393, 155), proton uptake with a time constant of approximately 2 ms was observed. However, no proton uptake associated with formation of F (tau congruent with 120 micros) was observed, which indicates that arachidonic acid can replace the role of D(I-132), but it cannot transfer protons as fast as the Asp. The results from this study show that D(I-132) is crucial for efficient transfer of protons into the enzyme and that in the DN(I-132) mutant enzyme there is a "kinetic barrier" for proton transfer into the D-pathway.  相似文献   

4.
Asparagine 131, located near the cytoplasmic entrance of the D-pathway in subunit I of the Paracoccus denitrificans aa(3) cytochrome c oxidase, is a residue crucial for proton pumping. When replaced by an aspartate, the mutant enzyme is completely decoupled: while retaining full cytochrome c oxidation activity, it does not pump protons. The same phenotype is observed for two other substitutions at this position (N131E and N131C), whereas a conservative replacement by glutamine affects both activities of the enzyme. The N131D variant oxidase was crystallized and its structure was solved to 2.32-A resolution, revealing no significant overall change in the protein structure when compared with the wild type (WT), except for an alternative orientation of the E278 side chain in addition to its WT conformation. Moreover, remarkable differences in the crystallographically resolved chain of water molecules in the D-pathway are found for the variant: four water molecules that are observed in the water chain between N131 and E278 in the WT structure are not visible in the variant, indicating a higher mobility of these water molecules. Electrochemically induced Fourier transform infrared difference spectra of decoupled mutants confirm that the protonation state of E278 is unaltered by these mutations but indicate a distinct perturbation in the hydrogen-bonding environment of this residue. Furthermore, they suggest that the carboxylate side chain of the N131D mutant is deprotonated. These findings are discussed in terms of their mechanistic implications for proton routing through the D-pathway of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

5.
Han D  Morgan JE  Gennis RB 《Biochemistry》2005,44(38):12767-12774
Cytochrome c oxidase uses the free energy of oxygen reduction to establish a transmembrane proton gradient. The proton-conducting D-channel in this enzyme is the major input pathway for protons which go to the binuclear center for water formation ("chemical protons") and likely the only input pathway for protons that get translocated across the lipid membrane ("pumped protons"). The D-channel starts at an acidic residue near the protein surface (D132, Rhodobacter sphaeroides numbering) and leads to another acidic residue near the binuclear center. Recent studies have shown that mutants that introduce an additional acidic residue in the channel (N139D) have the remarkable effect of accelerating steady-state oxidase activity but completely eliminating proton pumping. In this work, an aspartic acid was introduced at the position of glycine 204, G204D, which is also within the D-channel, and the effects were examined. In contrast to N139D, the G204D mutation results in a dramatic decrease of the steady-state oxygen reductase activity (<2% of wild type) [Aagaard, A., and Brzezinski, P. (2001) FEBS Lett. 494, 157-160]. The residual activity is not coupled to the proton pump, and furthermore, in reconstituted vesicles the mutant enzyme exhibits a reverse respiration control ratio; i.e., the mutant oxidase activity is stimulated rather than inhibited when working against a protonmotive force. Hence, the mutant behaves very much like the D132N, which blocks proton uptake through the D-channel. Single-turnover experiments show that the rate-limiting step in the reaction of O2 with the fully reduced G204D mutant is the F --> O transition, similar to the D132N mutant. The block of the D-channel in the D132N mutant can be partly bypassed by biochemically removing subunit III from the enzyme, indicating that removal of the subunit reveals an alternate entrance for protons to the channel. However, this is not observed with the G204D mutant. This suggests that the cryptic entrance to the D-channel that is revealed by the removal of subunit III is between the levels of G204 and D132.  相似文献   

6.
Heme-copper terminal oxidases use the free energy of oxygen reduction to establish a transmembrane proton gradient. While the molecular mechanism of coupling electron transfer to proton pumping is still under debate, recent structure determinations and mutagenesis studies have provided evidence for two pathways for protons within subunit I of this class of enzymes. Here, we probe the D-pathway by mutagenesis of the cytochrome c oxidase of the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans; amino acid replacements were selected with the rationale of interfering with the hydrophilic lining of the pathway, in particular its assumed chain of water molecules. Proton pumping was assayed in the reconstituted vesicle system by a stopped-flow spectroscopic approach, allowing a reliable assessment of proton translocation efficiency even at low turnover rates. Several mutations at positions above the cytoplasmic pathway entrance (Asn 131, Asn 199) and at the periplasmic exit region (Asp 399) led to complete inhibition of proton pumping; one of these mutants, N131D, exhibited an ideal decoupled phenotype, with a turnover comparable to that of the wild-type enzyme. Since sets of mutations in other positions along the presumed course of the pathway showed normal proton translocation stoichiometries, we conclude that the D-pathway is too wide in most areas above positions 131/199 to be disturbed by single amino acid replacements.  相似文献   

7.
In cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), a redox-driven proton pump, protons are transported by the Grotthuss shuttling via hydrogen-bonded water molecules and protonatable residues. Proton transport through the D-pathway is a complicated process that is highly sensitive to alterations in the amino acids or the solvation structure in the channel, both of which can inhibit proton pumping and enzymatic activity. Simulations of proton transport in the hydrophobic cavity showed a clear redox state dependence. To study the mechanism of proton pumping in CcO, multi-state empirical valence bond (MS-EVB) simulations have been conducted, focusing on the proton transport through the D-pathway and the hydrophobic cavity next to the binuclear center. The hydration structures, transport pathways, effects of residues, and free energy surfaces of proton transport were revealed in these MS-EVB simulations. The mechanistic insight gained from them is herein reviewed and placed in context for future studies.  相似文献   

8.
Adelroth P  Hosler J 《Biochemistry》2006,45(27):8308-8318
The major proton-transfer pathway into the buried active site of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is the D-pathway that begins with the subunit I residue Asp-132 on the inner protein surface (the cytoplasmic surface of the aa3-type CcO of Rhodobacter sphaeroides). Asp-132 is surrounded by residues from both subunits I and III. In the absence of subunit III, CcO retains activity, but the functional characteristics of the D-pathway are significantly altered such that the transfer of protons from Asp-132 into the pathway becomes the rate-limiting step. Determination of the pH-dependence of the rate constant for D-pathway proton uptake during the single-turnover of CcO indicates that the pKa of Asp-132 in the absence of subunit III is approximately 7. The removal of subunit III also allows for alternative surface proton donor/acceptors other than Asp-132. With Asp-132 altered to alanine, the rate constant for D-pathway proton uptake is very slow (5 s(-1)) in the presence of subunit III. Once subunit III is removed, the proton uptake rate constant increases 80-fold, to 400 s(-1). The pKa associated with this uptake is >10, and the initial proton donor/acceptor in D132A III (-) is proposed to be a water of the D-pathway rather than an amino acid residue. Arachidonic acid (Aa), which stimulates the activity of several D-pathway mutant CcOs, appears to become the initial proton donor/acceptor in the absence of subunit III, whether or not Asp-132 is altered. Aa shifts the pKa of the initial proton donor to 7.6 for both wild-type (WT) III (-) and D132A III (-). The results indicate that subunit III creates a barrier that helps prevent protons from donors other than Asp-132 from directly accessing the internal waters of the D-pathway, while the subunit also provides an environment that increases the rate at which Asp-132 transfers protons into the D-pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Real-time measurements of the cytochrome c oxidase reaction with oxygen were performed by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, using a mutant with a blocked D-pathway of proton transfer (D124N, Paracoccus denitrificans numbering). The complex spectrum of the ferryl-->oxidized transition together with other bands showed protonation of Glu 278 with a peak position at 1743 cm-1. Since our time resolution was not sufficient to follow the earlier reaction steps, the FTIR spectrum of the CO-inhibited fully reduced-->ferryl transition was obtained as a difference between the spectrum before the laser flash and the first spectrum after it. A trough at 1735 cm-1 due to deprotonation of Glu 278 was detected in this spectrum. These observations confirm the proposal [Smirnova I.A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 6826-6833] that the proton required for chemistry at the binuclear site is taken from Glu 278 in the perroxy-->ferryl step, and that the rate of the next step (ferryl-->oxidized) is limited by reprotonation of Glu 278 from the N-side of the membrane in the D124N mutant enzyme. The blockage of the D-pathway in this mutant for the first time allowed direct detection of deprotonation of Glu 278 and its reprotonation during oxidation of cytochrome oxidase by O2.  相似文献   

10.
The heme-copper oxidases convert the free energy liberated in the reduction of O(2) to water into a transmembrane proton electrochemical potential (protonmotive force). One of the essential structural elements of the enzyme is the D-channel, which is thought to be the input pathway, both for protons which go to form H(2)O ("chemical protons") and for protons that get translocated across the lipid membrane ("pumped protons"). The D-channel contains a chain of water molecules extending about 25 A from an aspartic acid (D132 in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides oxidase) near the cytoplasmic ("inside") enzyme surface to a glutamic acid (E286) in the protein interior. Mutations in which either of these acidic residues is replaced by their corresponding amides (D132N or E286Q) result in severe inhibition of enzyme activity. In the current work, an asparagine located in the D-channel has been replaced by the corresponding acid (N139 to D; N98 in bovine enzyme) with dramatic consequences. The N139D mutation not only completely eliminates proton pumping but, at the same time, confers a substantial increase (150-300%) in the steady-state cytochrome oxidase activity. The N139D mutant of the R. sphaeroides oxidase was further characterized by examining the rates of individual steps in the catalytic cycle. Under anaerobic conditions, the rate of reduction of heme a(3) in the fully oxidized enzyme, prior to the reaction with O(2), is identical to that of the wild-type oxidase and is not accelerated. However, the rate of reaction of the fully reduced enzyme with O(2) is accelerated by the N139D mutation, as shown by a more rapid F --> O transition. Whereas the rates of formation and decay of the oxygenated intermediates are altered, the nature of the oxygenated intermediates is not perturbed by the N139D mutation.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the effect of Zn ions on proton-transfer reactions in cytochrome c oxidase. In the absence of Zn(2+) the transition from the "peroxy" (P(R)) to the "ferryl" (F) intermediate has a time constant of approximately 100 micros and it is associated with proton transfer from the bulk solution with an intrinsic time constant of <100 micros, but rate limited by the P(R)-->F transition. While in the presence of 100 microM Zn(2+) the P(R)-->F transition was slowed by a factor of approximately 2, proton uptake from the bulk solution was impaired to a much greater extent. Instead, about two protons (one proton in the absence of Zn(2+)) were taken up during the next reaction step, i.e. the decay of F to the oxidized (O) enzyme with a time constant of approximately 2.5 ms. Thus, the results show that there is one proton available within the enzyme that can be used for oxygen reduction and confirm our previous observation that F can be formed without proton uptake from the bulk solution. No effect of Zn(2+) was observed with a mutant enzyme in which Asp(I-132), at the entry point of the D-pathway, was replaced by its non-protonatable analogue Asn. In addition, no effect of Zn(2+) was observed on the F-->O transition rate when measured in D(2)O, because in D(2)O, the transition is internally slowed to approximately 10 ms, which is already slower than with bound Zn(2+). Together with earlier results showing that both the P(R)-->F and F-->O transitions are associated with proton uptake through the D-pathway, the results from this study indicate that Zn(2+) binds to and blocks the entrance of the D-pathway.  相似文献   

12.
The cytochrome aa(3)-type quinol oxidase from the archaeon Acidianus ambivalens and the ba(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus are divergent members of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily of enzymes. In particular they lack most of the key residues involved in the proposed proton transfer pathways. The pumping capability of the A. ambivalens enzyme was investigated and found to occur with the same efficiency as the canonical enzymes. This is the first demonstration of pumping of 1 H(+)/electron in a heme-copper oxidase that lacks most residues of the K- and D-channels. Also, the structure of the ba(3) oxidase from T. thermophilus was simulated by mutating Phe274 to threonine and Glu278 to isoleucine in the D-pathway of the Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase. This modification resulted in full efficiency of proton translocation albeit with a substantially lowered turnover. Together, these findings show that multiple structural solutions for efficient proton conduction arose during evolution of the respiratory oxidases, and that very few residues remain invariant among these enzymes to function in a common proton-pumping mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Aagaard A  Brzezinski P 《FEBS letters》2001,494(3):157-160
Cytochrome c oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme that catalyses the reduction of O2 to H2O and uses part of the energy released in this reaction to pump protons across the membrane. We have investigated the effect of addition of Zn2+ on the kinetics of two reaction steps in cytochrome c oxidase that are associated with proton pumping; the peroxy to oxo-ferryl (P(r)-->F) and the oxo-ferryl to oxidised (F-->O) transitions. The Zn2+ binding resulted in a decrease of the F-->O rate from 820 s(-1) (no Zn2+) to a saturating value of approximately 360 s(-1) with an apparent K(D) of approximately 2.6 microM. The P(r)-->F rate (approximately 10[(4) s(-1)] before addition of Zn2+) decreased more slowly with increasing Zn2+ concentration and a K(D) of approximately 120 microM was observed. The effects on both kinetic phases were fully reversible upon addition of EDTA. Since both the P(r)-->F and F-->O transitions are associated with proton uptake through the D-pathway, a Zn2+-binding site is likely to be located at the entry point of this pathway, where several carboxylates and histidine residues are found that may co-ordinate Zn2+.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome c oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme, which catalyses the one-electron oxidation of four molecules of cytochrome c and the four-electron reduction of O(2) to water. Electron transfer through the enzyme is coupled to proton pumping across the membrane. Protons that are pumped as well as those that are used for O(2) reduction are transferred though a specific intraprotein (D) pathway. Results from earlier studies have shown that replacement of residue Asn139 by an Asp, at the beginning of the D pathway, results in blocking proton pumping without slowing uptake of substrate protons used for O(2) reduction. Furthermore, introduction of the acidic residue results in an increase of the apparent pK(a) of E286, an internal proton donor to the catalytic site, from 9.4 to ~11. In this study we have investigated intramolecular electron and proton transfer in a mutant cytochrome c oxidase in which a neutral residue, Thr, was introduced at the 139 site. The mutation results in uncoupling of proton pumping from O(2) reduction, but a decrease in the apparent pK(a) of E286 from 9.4 to 7.6. The data provide insights into the mechanism by which cytochrome c oxidase pumps protons and the structural elements involved in this process.  相似文献   

15.
The N139D mutant of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides retains full steady state oxidase activity but completely lacks proton translocation coupled to turnover in reconstituted liposomes (Pawate, A. S., Morgan, J., Namslauer, A., Mills, D., Brzezinski, P., Ferguson-Miller, S., and Gennis, R. B. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 13417-13423). Here, time-resolved electron transfer and vectorial charge translocation in the ferryl-oxo --> oxidized transition (transfer of the 4th electron in the catalytic cycle) have been studied with the N139D mutant using ruthenium(II)-tris-bipyridyl complex as a photoactive single-electron donor. With the wild type oxidase, the flash-induced generation of Deltaphi in the ferryl-oxo --> oxidized transition begins with rapid vectorial electron transfer from CuA to heme a (tau approximately 15 micros), followed by two protonic phases, referred to as the intermediate (0.4 ms) and slow electrogenic phases (1.5 ms). In the N139D mutant, only a single protonic phase (tau approximately 0.6 ms) is observed, which was associated with electron transfer from heme a to the heme a3/CuB site and decelerates approximately 4-fold in D2O. With the wild type oxidase, such a high H2O/D2O solvent isotope effect is characteristic of only the slow (1.5 ms) phase. Presumably, the 0.6-ms electrogenic phase in the N139D mutant reports proton transfer from the inner aqueous phase to Glu-286, replacing the "chemical" proton transferred from Glu-286 to the heme a3/CuB site. The transfer occurs through the D-channel, because it is observed also in the N139D/K362M double mutant in which the K-channel is blocked. It is concluded that the intermediate electrogenic phase observed in the wild type enzyme is missing in the N139D mutant and is because of translocation of the "pumped" proton from Glu-286 to the D-ring propionate of heme a3 or to release of this proton to the outer aqueous phase. Significantly, with the wild type oxidase, the protonic electrogenic phase associated with proton pumping (approximately 0.4 ms) precedes the electrogenic phase associated with the oxygen chemistry (approximately 1.5 ms).  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the electron-proton coupling during the peroxy (P(R)) to oxo-ferryl (F) and F to oxidised (O) transitions in cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The kinetics of these reactions were investigated in two different mutant enzymes: (1) ED(I-286), in which one of the key residues in the D-pathway, E(I-286), was replaced by an aspartate which has a shorter side chain than that of the glutamate and, (2) ML(II-263), in which the redox potential of Cu(A) is increased by approximately 100 mV, which slows electron transfer to the binuclear centre during the F-->O transition by a factor of approximately 200. In ED(I-286) proton uptake during P(R)-->F was slowed by a factor of approximately 5, which indicates that E(I-286) is the proton donor to P(R). In addition, in the mutant enzyme the F-->O transition rate displayed a deuterium isotope effect of approximately 2.5 as compared with approximately 7 in the wild-type enzyme. Since the entire deuterium isotope effect was shown to be associated with a single proton-transfer reaction in which the proton donor and acceptor must approach each other (M. Karpefors, P. Adelroth, P. Brzezinski, Biochemistry 39 (2000) 6850), the smaller deuterium isotope effect in ED(I-286) indicates that proton transfer from E(I-286) determines the rate also of the F-->O transition. In ML(II-263) the electron-transfer to the binuclear centre is slower than the intrinsic proton-transfer rate through the D-pathway. Nevertheless, both electron and proton transfer to the binuclear centre displayed a deuterium isotope effect of approximately 8, i.e., about the same as in the wild-type enzyme, which shows that these reactions are intimately coupled.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides has two proton-input pathways leading from the protein surface towards the catalytic site, located within the membrane-spanning part of the enzyme. One of these pathways, the D-pathway, contains a highly conserved Glu residue [E(I-286)], which plays an important role in proton transfer through the pathway. In a recent study, we showed that a mutant enzyme in which E(I-286) was re-located to the opposite side of the D-pathway [EA(I-286)/IE(I-112) double mutant enzyme] was able to pump protons, although with a stoichiometry that was lower than that of the wild-type enzyme (approximately 0.6 H(+)/e(-)) (Aagaard et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 15847-15850). These results showed that the residue must not necessarily be located at a specific place in the amino-acid sequence, but rather at a specific location in space. In this study, we have investigated the effect of moving E(I-286) on the kinetics of specific reaction steps of the catalytic cycle in the pH range 6-11. Our results show that during the reaction of the four-electron reduced enzyme with O(2), the rates of the two first transitions (up to formation of the 'peroxy' intermediate, P(r)) are the same for the double mutant as for the wild-type enzyme, but formation of the oxo-ferryl (F) and fully oxidized (O) states, associated with proton uptake from the bulk solution, are slowed by factors of approximately 30 and approximately 400, respectively. Thus, in spite of the dramatically reduced transition rates, the proton-pumping stoichiometry is reduced only by approximately 40%. The apparent pK(a) values in the pH-dependencies of the rates of the P(R)-->F and F-->O transitions were >3 and approximately 2 units lower than those of the corresponding transitions in the wild-type enzyme, respectively. The relation between the modified pK(a)s, the transition rates between oxygen intermediates and the pumping stoichiometry is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics and stoichiometry of the redox-linked protonation of the soluble Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase were investigated at pH = 7.2-7.5 by multiwavelength stopped-flow spectroscopy, using the pH indicator phenol red. We compared the wild-type enzyme with the K354M and the D124N subunit I mutants, in which the K- and D-proton-conducting pathways are impaired, respectively. Upon anaerobic reduction by Ru-II hexamine, the wild-type enzyme binds 3.3 +/- 0.6 H(+)/aa(3), i.e., approximately 1 H(+) in excess over beef heart oxidase under similar conditions and the D124N mutant 3.2 +/- 0.5 H(+)/aa(3). In contrast, in the K354M mutant, in which the reduction of heme a(3)-Cu(B) is severely impaired, approximately 0.8 H(+) is promptly bound synchronously with the reduction of heme a, followed by a much slower protonation associated with the retarded reduction of the heme a(3)-Cu(B) site. These results indicate that complete reduction of heme a (and Cu(A)) is coupled to the uptake of approximately 0.8 H(+), which is independent of both H(+)-pathways, whereas the subsequent reduction of the heme a(3)-Cu(B) site is associated with the uptake of approximately 2.5 H(+) transferred (at least partially) through the K-pathway. On the basis of these results, the possible involvement of the D-pathway in the redox-linked protonation of cytochrome c oxidase is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
T Haltia  M Saraste    M Wikstrm 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(8):2015-2021
Subunit III (COIII) is one of the three core subunits of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase. COIII does not contain any of the redox centres and can be removed from the purified enzyme but has a function during biosynthesis of the enzyme. Dicyclohexyl carbodiimide (DCCD) modifies a conserved glutamic acid residue in COIII and abolishes the proton translocation activity of the enzyme. In this study, the invariant carboxylic acids E98 (the DCCD-binding glutamic acid) and D259 of COIII were changed by site-directed mutagenesis to study their role in proton pumping. Spectroscopy and activity measurements show that a structurally normal enzyme, which is active in electron transfer, is formed in the presence of the mutagenized COIII. Experiments with bacterial spheroplasts indicate that the mutant oxidases are fully competent in proton translocation. In the absence of the COIII gene, only a fraction of the oxidase is assembled into an enzyme with low but significant activity. This residual activity is also coupled to proton translocation. We conclude that, in contrast to numerous earlier suggestions, COIII is not an essential element of the proton pump.  相似文献   

20.
Cytochrome c oxidase couples the reduction of dioxygen to proton pumping against an electrochemical gradient. The D-channel, a 25-Å-long cavity, provides the principal pathway for the uptake of chemical and pumped protons. A water chain is thought to mediate the relay of protons via a Grotthuss mechanism through the D-channel, but it is interrupted at N139 in all available crystallographic structures. We use free-energy simulations to examine the proton uptake pathway in the wild type and in single-point mutants N139V and N139A, in which redox and pumping activities are compromised. We present a general approach for the calculation of water occupancy in protein cavities and demonstrate that combining efficient sampling algorithms with long simulation times (hundreds of nanoseconds) is required to achieve statistical convergence of equilibrium properties in the protein interior. The relative population of different conformational and hydration states of the D-channel is characterized. Results shed light on the role of N139 in the mechanism of proton uptake and clarify the physical basis for inactive phenotypes. The conformational isomerization of the N139 side chain is shown to act as a gate controlling the formation of a functional water chain or “proton wire.” In the closed state of N139, the spatial distribution of water in the D-channel is consistent with available crystallographic models. However, a metastable state of N139 opens up a narrow bottleneck in which 50% occupancy by a water molecule establishes a proton pathway throughout the D-channel. Results for N139V suggest that blockage of proton uptake resulting from persistent interruption of the water pathway is the cause of this mutant's marginal oxidase activity. In contrast, results for N139A indicate that the D-channel is a continuously hydrated cavity, implying that the decoupling of oxidase activity from proton pumping measured in this mutant is not due to interruption of the proton relay chain.  相似文献   

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