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1.
The operon (cyo) encoding the Na(+)-pumping respiratory terminal oxidase (cytochrome bo) of the bacterium Vitreoscilla was transformed into Escherichia coli GV100, a deletion mutant of cytochrome bo. This was done for the wild type operon and five mutants in three conserved Cyo subunit I amino acids known to be crucial for H(+) transport in the E. coli enzyme, one near the nuclear center, one in the K-channel, and one in the D-channel. CO-binding, NADH and ubiquinol oxidase, and Na(+)-pumping activities were all substantially inhibited by each mutation. The wild type Vitreoscilla cytochrome bo can pump Na(+) against a concentration gradient, resulting in a transmembrane concentration differential of 2-3 orders of magnitude. It is proposed that Vitreoscilla cytochrome bo pumps four Na(+) through the D-channel to the exterior and transports four H(+) through the K-channel for the reduction of each O(2).  相似文献   

2.
Recent electrostatics calculations on the cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans revealed an unexpected coupling between the redox state of the heme-copper center and the state of protonation of a glutamic acid (E78II) that is 25 A away in subunit II of the oxidase. Examination of more than 300 sequences of the homologous subunit in other heme-copper oxidases shows that this residue is virtually totally conserved and is in a cluster of very highly conserved residues at the "negative" end (bacterial cytoplasm or mitochondrial matrix) of the second transmembrane helix. The functional importance of several residues in this cluster (E89II, W93II, T94II, and P96II) was examined by site-directed mutagenesis of the corresponding region of the cytochrome bo(3) quinol oxidase from Escherichia coli (where E89II is the equivalent of residue E78II of the P. denitrificans oxidase). Substitution of E89II with either alanine or glutamine resulted in reducing the rate of turnover to about 43 or 10% of the wild-type value, respectively, whereas E89D has only about 60% of the activity of the control oxidase. The quinol oxidase activity of the W93V mutant is also reduced to about 30% of that of the wild-type oxidase. Spectroscopic studies with the purified E89A and E89Q mutants indicate no perturbation of the heme-copper center. The data suggest that E89II (E. coli numbering) is critical for the function of the heme copper oxidases. The proximity to K362 suggests that this glutamic acid residue may regulate proton entry or transit through the K-channel. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that the degree of oxidation of the low-spin heme b is greater in the steady state using hydrogen peroxide as an oxidant in place of dioxygen for the E89Q mutant. Thus, it appears that the inhibition resulting from the E89II mutation is due to a block in the reduction of the heme-copper binuclear center, expected for K-channel mutants.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) transfers protons from the inner surface of the enzyme to the buried O2 reduction site through two different pathways, termed K and D, and from the outer surface via an undefined route. These proton paths can be inhibited by metals such as zinc or cadmium, but the sites of inhibition have not been established. Anomalous difference Fourier analyses of Rhodobacter sphaeroides CcO crystals, with cadmium added, reveal metal binding sites that include the proposed initial proton donor/acceptor of the K pathway, Glu-101 of subunit II. Mutant forms of CcO that lack Glu-101II (E101A and E101A/H96A) exhibit low activity and eliminate metal binding at this site. Significant activity is restored to E101A and E101A/H96A by adding the lipophilic carboxylic compounds, arachidonic acid and cholic acid, but not by their non-carboxylic analogues. These amphipathic acids likely provide their carboxylic groups as substitute proton donors/acceptors in the absence of Glu-101II, as previously observed for arachidonic acid in mutants that alter Asp-132I of the D pathway. The activity of E101A/H96A is still inhibited by zinc, but this remaining inhibition is nearly eliminated by removal of subunit III, which is known to alter the D pathway. The results identify the Glu-101/His-96 site of subunit II as the site of metal binding that inhibits the uptake of protons into the K pathway and indicate that subunit III contributes to zinc binding and/or inhibition of the D pathway. By removing subunit III from E101A/H96A, thereby eliminating zinc inhibition of the uptake of protons from the inner surface of CcO, we confirm that an external zinc binding site is involved in inhibiting the backflow of protons to the active site.  相似文献   

6.
Hemp J  Han H  Roh JH  Kaplan S  Martinez TJ  Gennis RB 《Biochemistry》2007,46(35):9963-9972
Oxygen reductase members of the heme-copper superfamily are terminal respiratory oxidases in mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria and archaea, coupling the reduction of molecular oxygen to water to the translocation of protons across the plasma membrane. The protons required for catalysis and pumping in the oxygen reductases are derived from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, transferred via proton-conducting channels comprised of hydrogen bond chains containing internal water molecules along with polar amino acid side chains. Recent analyses identified eight oxygen reductase families in the superfamily: the A-, B-, C-, D-, E-, F-, G-, and H-families of oxygen reductases. Two proton input channels, the K-channel and the D-channel, are well established in the A-family of oxygen reductases (exemplified by the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidases and by the respiratory oxidases from Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Paracoccus denitrificans). Each of these channels can be identified by the pattern of conserved polar amino acid residues within the protein. The C-family (cbb3 oxidases) is the second most abundant oxygen reductase family after the A-family, making up more than 20% of the sequences of the heme-copper superfamily. In this work, sequence analyses and structural modeling have been used to identify likely proton channels in the C-family. The pattern of conserved polar residues supports the presence of only one proton input channel, which is spatially analogous to the K-channel in the A-family. There is no pattern of conserved residues that could form a D-channel analogue or an alternative proton channel. The functional importance of the residues proposed to be part of the K-channel was tested by site-directed mutagenesis using the cbb3 oxidases from R. sphaeroides and Vibrio cholerae. Several of the residues proposed to be part of the putative K-channel had significantly reduced catalytic activity upon mutation: T219V, Y227F/Y228F, N293D, and Y321F. The data strongly suggest that in the C-family only one channel functions for the delivery of both catalytic and pumped protons. In addition, it is also proposed that a pair of acidic residues, which are totally conserved among the C-family, may be part of a proton-conducting exit channel for pumped protons. The residues homologous to these acidic amino acids are highly conserved in the cNOR family of nitric oxide reductases and have previously been implicated as part of a proton-conducting channel delivering protons from the periplasmic side of the membrane to the enzyme active site in the cNOR family. It is possible that the C-family contains a homologous proton-conducting channel that delivers pumped protons in the opposite direction, from the active site to the periplasm.  相似文献   

7.
A key enzyme in aerobic metabolism is cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), which catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to water in the mitochondrial and bacterial membranes. Substrate electrons and protons are taken up from different sides of the membrane and protons are pumped across the membrane, thereby generating an electrochemical gradient. The well-studied A-type CcO uses two different entry channels for protons: the D-channel for all pumped and two consumed protons, and the K-channel for the other two consumed protons. In contrast, the B-type CcO uses only a single proton input channel for all consumed and pumped protons. It has the same location as the A-type K-channel (and thus is named the K-channel analog) without sharing any significant sequence homology. In this study, we performed molecular-dynamics simulations and electrostatic calculations to characterize the K-channel analog in terms of its energetic requirements and functionalities. The function of Glu-15B as a proton sink at the channel entrance is demonstrated by its rotational movement out of the channel when it is deprotonated and by its high pKA value when it points inside the channel. Tyr-244 in the middle of the channel is identified as the valve that ensures unidirectional proton transfer, as it moves inside the hydrogen-bond gap of the K-channel analog only while being deprotonated. The electrostatic energy landscape was calculated for all proton-transfer steps in the K-channel analog, which functions via proton-hole transfer. Overall, the K-channel analog has a very stable geometry without large energy barriers.  相似文献   

8.
Krithika Ganesan  Robert B. Gennis 《BBA》2010,1797(6-7):619-624
The K-pathway is one of the two proton-input channels required for function of cytochrome c oxidase. In the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase, the K-channel starts at Glu101 in subunit II, which is at the surface of the protein exposed to the cytoplasm, and runs to Tyr288 at the heme a3/CuB active site. Mutations of conserved, polar residues within the K-channel block or inhibit steady state oxidase activity. A large body of research has demonstrated that the K-channel is required to fully reduce the heme/Cu binuclear center, prior to the reaction with O2, presumably by providing protons to stabilize the reduced metals (ferrous heme a3 and cuprous CuB). However, there are conflicting reports which raise questions about whether blocking the K-channel blocks both electrons or only one electron from reaching the heme/Cu center. In the current work, the rate and extent of the anaerobic reduction of the heme/Cu center were monitored by optical and EPR spectroscopies, comparing the wild type and mutants that block the K-channel. The new data show that when the K-channel is blocked, one electron will still readily enter the binuclear center. The one-electron reduction of the resting oxidized (“O”) heme/Cu center of the K362M mutant, results in a partially reduced binuclear center in which the electron is distributed about evenly between heme a3 and CuB in the R. sphaeroides oxidase. Complete reduction of the heme/Cu center requires the uptake of two protons which must be delivered through the K-channel.  相似文献   

9.
A key enzyme in aerobic metabolism is cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), which catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to water in the mitochondrial and bacterial membranes. Substrate electrons and protons are taken up from different sides of the membrane and protons are pumped across the membrane, thereby generating an electrochemical gradient. The well-studied A-type CcO uses two different entry channels for protons: the D-channel for all pumped and two consumed protons, and the K-channel for the other two consumed protons. In contrast, the B-type CcO uses only a single proton input channel for all consumed and pumped protons. It has the same location as the A-type K-channel (and thus is named the K-channel analog) without sharing any significant sequence homology. In this study, we performed molecular-dynamics simulations and electrostatic calculations to characterize the K-channel analog in terms of its energetic requirements and functionalities. The function of Glu-15B as a proton sink at the channel entrance is demonstrated by its rotational movement out of the channel when it is deprotonated and by its high pKA value when it points inside the channel. Tyr-244 in the middle of the channel is identified as the valve that ensures unidirectional proton transfer, as it moves inside the hydrogen-bond gap of the K-channel analog only while being deprotonated. The electrostatic energy landscape was calculated for all proton-transfer steps in the K-channel analog, which functions via proton-hole transfer. Overall, the K-channel analog has a very stable geometry without large energy barriers.  相似文献   

10.
Cytochrome bd is a quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli under microaerophilic growth conditions. Coupling of the release of protons to the periplasm by quinol oxidation to the uptake of protons from the cytoplasm for dioxygen reduction generates a proton motive force. On the basis of sequence analysis, glutamates 99 and 107 conserved in transmembrane helix III of subunit I have been proposed to convey protons from the cytoplasm to heme d at the periplasmic side. To probe a putative proton channel present in subunit I of E. coli cytochrome bd, we substituted a total of 10 hydrophilic residues and two glycines conserved in helices I and III-V and examined effects of amino acid substitutions on the oxidase activity and bound hemes. We found that Ala or Leu mutants of Arg9 and Thr15 in helix I, Gly93 and Gly100 in helix III, and Ser190 and Thr194 in helix V exhibited the wild-type phenotypes, while Ala and Gln mutants of His126 in helix IV retained all hemes but partially lost the activity. In contrast, substitutions of Thr26 in helix I, Glu99 and Glu107 in helix III, Ser140 in helix IV, and Thr187 in helix V resulted in the concomitant loss of bound heme b558 (T187L) or b595-d (T26L, E99L/A/D, E107L/A/D, and S140A) and the activity. Glu99 and Glu107 mutants except E107L completely lost the heme b595-d center, as reported for heme b595 ligand (His19) mutants. On the basis of this study and previous studies, we propose arrangement of transmembrane helices in subunit I, which may explain possible roles of conserved hydrophilic residues within the membrane.  相似文献   

11.
Micromolar concentrations of the bile salt deoxycholate are shown to rescue the activity of an inactive mutant, E101A, in the K proton pathway of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase. A crystal structure of the wild-type enzyme reveals, as predicted, deoxycholate bound with its carboxyl group at the entrance of the K path. Since cholate is a known potent inhibitor of bovine oxidase and is seen in a similar position in the bovine structure, the crystallographically defined, conserved steroid binding site could reveal a regulatory site for steroids or structurally related molecules that act on the essential K proton path.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides with hydrogen peroxide has been studied at alkaline (pH 8.5) and acidic (pH 6.5) conditions with the aid of a stopped-flow apparatus. Absorption changes in the entire 350-800 nm spectral range were monitored and analyzed by a global fitting procedure. The reaction can be described by the sequential formation of two intermediates analogous to compounds I and II of peroxidases: oxidized COX + H2O2 --> intermediate I --> intermediate II. At pH as high as 8.5, intermediate I appears to be a mixture of at least two species characterized by absorption bands at approximately 607 nm (P607) and approximately 580 nm (F-I580) that rise synchronously. At acidic pH (6.5), intermediate I is represented mainly by a component with an alpha-peak around 575 nm (F-I575) that is probably equivalent to the so-called F* species observed with the bovine COX. The data are consistent with a pH-dependent reaction branching at the step of intermediate I formation. To get further insight into the mechanism of the pH-dependence, the peroxide reaction was studied using two mutants of the R. sphaeroides oxidase, K362M and D132N, that block, respectively, the proton-conducting K- and D-channels. The D132N mutation does not affect significantly the Ox --> intermediate I step of the peroxide reaction. In contrast, K362M replacement exerts a dramatic effect, eliminating the pH-dependence of intermediate I formation. The data obtained allow us to propose that formation of the acidic form of intermediate I (F-I575, F*) requires protonation of some group at/near the binuclear site that follows or is concerted with peroxide binding. The protonation involves specifically the K-channel. Presumably, a proton vacancy can be generated in the site as a consequence of the proton-assisted heterolytic scission of the O-O bond of the bound peroxide. The results are consistent with a proposal [Vygodina, T. V., Pecoraro, C., Mitchell, D., Gennis, R., and Konstantinov, A. A. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 3053-3061] that the K-channel may be involved in the delivery of the first four protons in the catalytic cycle (starting from reduction of the oxidized form) including proton uptake coupled to reduction of the binuclear site and transfer of protons driven by cleavage of the dioxygen O-O bond in the binculear site. Once peroxide intermediate I has been formed, generation of a strong oxene ligand at the heme a3 iron triggers a transition of the enzyme to the "peroxidase conformation" in which the K-channel is closed and the binuclear site becomes protonically disconnected from the bulk aqueous phase.  相似文献   

13.
To determine the interaction site for cytochrome c (Cc) on cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), a number of conserved carboxyl residues in subunit II of Rhodobacter sphaeroides CcO were mutated to neutral forms. A highly conserved tryptophan, Trp(143), was also mutated to phenylalanine and alanine. Spectroscopic and metal analyses of the surface carboxyl mutants revealed no overall structural changes. The double mutants D188Q/E189N and D151Q/E152N exhibit similar steady-state kinetic behavior as wild-type oxidase with horse Cc and R. sphaeroides Cc(2), showing that these residues are not involved in Cc binding. The single mutants E148Q, E157Q, D195N, and D214N have decreased activities and increased K(m) values, indicating they contribute to the Cc:CcO interface. However, their reactions with horse and R. sphaeroides Cc are different, as expected from the different distribution of surface lysines on these cytochromes c. Mutations at Trp(143) severely inhibit activity without changing the K(m) for Cc or disturbing the adjacent Cu(A) center. From these data, we identify a Cc binding area on CcO with Trp(143) and Asp(214) close to the site of electron transfer and Glu(148), Glu(157), and Asp(195) providing electrostatic guidance. The results are completely consistent with time-resolved kinetic measurements (Wang, K., Zhen, Y., Sadoski, R., Grinnell, S., Geren, L., Ferguson-Miller, S., Durham, B., and Millett, F. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38042-38050) and computational docking analysis (Roberts, V. A., and Pique, M. E. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38051-38060).  相似文献   

14.
Cheng VW  Johnson A  Rothery RA  Weiner JH 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9107-9116
Escherichia coli succinate dehydrogenase (Sdh) belongs to the highly conserved complex II family of enzymes that reduce ubiquinone. These enzymes do not generate a protonmotive force during catalysis and are electroneutral. Because of its electroneutrality, the quinone reduction reaction must consume cytoplasmic protons which are released stoichiometrically during succinate oxidation. The X-ray crystal structure of E. coli Sdh shows that residues SdhB (G227), SdhC (D95), and SdhC (E101) are located at or near the entrance of a water channel that has been proposed to function as a proton wire connecting the cytoplasm to the quinone binding site. However, the pig and chicken Sdh enzymes show an alternative entrance to the water channel via the conserved SdhD (Q78) residue. In this study, site-directed mutants of these four residues were created and characterized by in vivo growth assays, in vitro activity assays, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. We show that the observed water channel in the E. coli Sdh structure is the functional proton wire in vivo, while in vitro results indicate an alternative entrance for protons. In silico examination of the E. coli Sdh reveals a possible H-bonding network leading from the cytoplasm to the quinone binding site that involves SdhD (D15). On the basis of these results we propose an alternative proton pathway in E. coli Sdh that might be functional only in vitro.  相似文献   

15.
Both the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (RsCcO(aa3)) and the closely related bo(3)-type ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli (EcQO(bo3)) possess a proton-conducting D-channel that terminates at a glutamic acid, E286, which is critical for controlling proton transfer to the active site for oxygen chemistry and to a proton loading site for proton pumping. E286 mutations in each enzyme block proton flux and, therefore, inhibit oxidase function. In the current work, resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to show that the E286A and E286C mutations in RsCcO(aa3) result in long range conformational changes that influence the protein interactions with both heme a and heme a(3). Therefore, the severe reduction of the steady-state activity of the E286 mutants in RsCcO(aa3) to ~0.05% is not simply a result of the direct blockage of the D-channel, but it is also a consequence of the conformational changes induced by the mutations to heme a and to the heme a(3)-Cu(B) active site. In contrast, the E286C mutation of EcQO(bo3) exhibits no evidence of conformational changes at the two heme sites, indicating that its reduced activity (3%) is exclusively a result of the inhibition of proton transfer from the D-channel. We propose that in RsCcO(aa3), the E286 mutations severely perturb the active site through a close interaction with F282, which lies between E286 and the heme-copper active site. The local structure around E286 in EcQO(bo3) is different, providing a rationale for the very different effects of E286 mutations in the two enzymes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

16.
It has recently become evident that many bacterial respiratory oxidases are members of a superfamily that is related to the eukaryotic cytochrome c oxidase. These oxidases catalyze the reduction of oxygen to water at a heme-copper binuclear center. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy has been used to examine the heme-copper-containing respiratory oxidases of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Ga. This technique monitors the stretching frequency of CO bound at the oxygen binding site and can be used to characterize the oxidases in situ with membrane preparations. Oxidases that have a heme-copper binuclear center are recognizable by FTIR spectroscopy because the bound CO moves from the heme iron to the nearby copper upon photolysis at low temperature, where it exhibits a diagnostic spectrum. The FTIR spectra indicate that the binuclear center of the R. sphaeroides aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase is remarkably similar to that of the bovine mitochondrial oxidase. Upon deletion of the ctaD gene, encoding subunit I of the aa3-type oxidase, substantial cytochrome c oxidase remains in the membranes of aerobically grown R. sphaeroides. This correlates with a second wild-type R. sphaeroides is grown photosynthetically, the chromatophore membranes lack the aa3-type oxidase but have this second heme-copper oxidase. Subunit I of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily contains the binuclear center. Amino acid sequence alignments show that this subunit is structurally very highly conserved among both eukaryotic and prokaryotic species. The polymerase chain reaction was used to show that the chromosome of R. sphaeroides contains at least one other gene that is a homolog of ctaD, the gene encoding subunit I of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The cbb3-type oxidases are members of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily, distant by sequence comparisons, but sharing common functional characteristics. To understand the minimal common properties of the superfamily, and to learn about cbb3-type oxidases specifically, we have analyzed a wide set of heme-copper oxidase sequences and built a homology model of the catalytic subunit of the cbb3 oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. We conclude that with regard to the active site surroundings, the cbb3 oxidases greatly resemble the structurally known oxidases, while major differences are found in three segments: the additional N-terminal stretch of ca. 60 amino acids, the segment following helix 3 to the end of helix 5, and the C-terminus from helix 11 onward. The conserved core contains the active site tyrosine and also an analogue of the K-channel of proton transfer, but centered on a well-conserved histidine in the lower part of helix 7. Modeling the variant parts of the enzyme suggests that two periplasmic loops (between helices 3 and 4 and between helices 11 and 12) could interact with each other as a part of the active site structure and might have an important role in proton pumping. An analogue of the D-channel is not found, but an alternative channel might form around helix 9. A preliminary packing model of the trimeric enzyme is also presented.  相似文献   

18.
The thermohalophilic bacterium Rhodothermus marinus expresses a caa(3)-type dioxygen reductase as one of its terminal oxidases. The subunit I amino acid sequence shows the presence of all the essential residues of the D- and K-proton channels, defined in most heme-copper oxidases, with the exception of the key glutamate residue located in the middle of the membrane dielectric (E278 in Paracoccus denitrificans). On the basis of homology modeling studies, a tyrosine residue (Y256, R. marinus numbering) has been proposed to act as a functional substitute [Pereira, M. M., Santana, M., Soares, C. M., Mendes, J., Carita, J. N., Fernandes, A. S., Saraste, M., Carrondo, M. A., and Teixeira, M. (1999) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1413, 1-13]. Here, R. marinus caa(3) oxidase was reconstituted in liposomes and shown to operate as a proton pump, translocating protons from the cytoplasmic side of the bacterial inner membrane to the periplasmatic space with a stoichiometry of 1H(+)/e(-), as in the case in heme-copper oxidases that contain the glutamate residue. Possible mechanisms of proton transfer in the D-channel with the participation of the tyrosine residue are discussed. The observation that the tyrosine residue is conserved in several other members of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily suggests a common alternative mode of action for the D-channel.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》2014,1837(12):1998-2003
The metabolism of aerobic life uses the conversion of molecular oxygen to water as an energy source. This reaction is catalyzed by cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) consuming four electrons and four protons, which move along specific routes. While all four electrons are transferred via the same cofactors to the binuclear reaction center (BNC), the protons take two different routes in the A-type CcO, i.e., two of the four chemical protons consumed in the reaction arrive via the D-channel in the oxidative first half starting after oxygen binding. The other two chemical protons enter via the K-channel in the reductive second half of the reaction cycle. To date, the mechanism behind these separate proton transport pathways has not been understood.In this study, we propose a model that can explain the reaction-step specific opening and closing of the K-channel by conformational and pKA changes of its central lysine 362. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal an upward movement of Lys362 towards the BNC, which had already been supposed by several experimental studies. Redox state-dependent pKA calculations provide evidence that Lys362 may protonate transiently, thereby opening the K-channel only in the reductive second half of the reaction cycle. From our results, we develop a model that assigns a key role to Lys362 in the proton gating between the two proton input channels of the A-type CcO.  相似文献   

20.
The cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex was recently purified from Escherichia coli membranes (Miller, M. J., and Gennis , R. B. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9159-1965). The complex contains two polypeptides, subunits I and II, as shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and three spectroscopically defined cytochromes, b558 , a1, and d. A mutant that failed to oxidize N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine was obtained which was lacking this terminal oxidase complex and was shown to map at a locus called cyd on the E. coli genome. In this paper, localized mutagenesis was used to generate a series of mutants in the cytochrome d terminal oxidase. These mutants were isolated by a newly developed selection procedure based on their sensitivity to azide. Two classes of mutants which map to the cyd locus were obtained, cydA and cydB . The cydA phenotype included the lack of all three spectroscopically detectable cytochromes as well as the absence of both polypeptides, determined by immunological criteria. Strains manifesting the cydB phenotype lacked cytochromes a1 and d, but had a normal amount of cytochrome b558 . Immunological analysis showed that subunit I (57,000 daltons) was present in the membranes, but that subunit II (43,000 daltons) was missing. These data justify the conclusion that subunit I of this two-subunit complex can be identified as the cytochrome b558 component of the cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex.  相似文献   

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