首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Although several X-ray structures have been determined for the mitochondrial cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex, none yet shows the position of the substrate, ubiquinol, in the quinol oxidase (Q(o)) site. In this study, the interaction of molecular oxygen with the reactive intermediate Q(o) semiquinone is used to probe the Q(o) site. It has been known for some time that partial turnover of the cyt bc(1) complex in the presence of antimycin A, a Q(i) site inhibitor, results in accumulation of a semiquinone at the Q(o) site, which can reduce O(2) to superoxide (O(2)(*)(-)). It was more recently shown that myxothiazol, which binds close to the cyt b(L) heme in the proximal Q(o) niche, also induces O(2)(*)(-) production. In this work, it is shown that, in addition to myxothiazol, a number of other proximal Q(o) inhibitors [including (E)-beta-methoxyacrylate-stilbene, mucidin, and famoxadone] also induce O(2)(*)(-) production in the isolated yeast cyt bc(1) complex, at approximately 50% of the V(max) observed in the presence of antimycin A. It is proposed that proximal Q(o) site inhibitors induce O(2)(*)(-) production because they allow formation, but not oxidation, of the semiquinone at the distal niche of the Q(o) site pocket. The apparent K(m) for ubiquinol at the Q(o) site in the presence of proximal Q(o) site inhibitors suggests that the "distal niche" of the Q(o) pocket can act as a fully independent quinol binding and oxidation site. Together with the X-ray structures, these results suggest substrate ubiquinol binds in a fashion similar to that of stigmatellin with H-bonds between H161 of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein and E272 of the cyt b protein. When modeled in this way, mucidin and ubiquinol can bind simultaneously to the Q(o) site with virtually no steric hindrance, whereas progressively bulkier inhibitors exhibit increasing overlap. The fact that partial turnover of the Q(o) site is possible even with bound proximal Q(o) site inhibitors is consistent with the participation of two separate functional Q(o) binding niches, occupied simultaneously or sequentially.  相似文献   

2.
Recent X-ray crystallographic analyses of the mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex show ubiquinone binding at the Q(i) site, but attempts to show binding of ubiquinol or ubiquinone at the Q(o) site have been unsuccessful, even though the binding of noncompetitive Q(o) site inhibitors near the putative ubiquinol binding pocket is well established. We speculate that ubiquinol binds transiently to the Q(o) site only when both heme b(L) and the iron sulfur cluster are in the oxidized form, an experimental condition difficult to obtain since ubiquinol will be oxidized once bound to the site. Stable binding at the Q(o) site might be achieved by a nonoxidizable ubiquinol-like compound. For this purpose, the isomers 2,3,4-trimethoxy-5-decyl-6-methyl-phenol (TMDMP) and 2,3,4-trimethoxy-5-methyl-6-decyl-phenol (TMMDP) were synthesized from 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl-6-decyl-1, 4-benzoquinol (Q0C10) by controlled methylation and separated by TLC and HPLC. The structures of TMDMP and TMMDP were established by 1H-13C-two-dimensional NMR. Both are competitive inhibitors of the cytochrome bc1 complex, with TMDMP being the stronger one. Preliminary results suggest that TMDMP binds tightly enough to make X-ray crystallography of inhibitor-bc1 complex co-crystals feasible. The binding site of TMDMP does not overlap with the binding sites of stigmatellin, MOA-stilbene (MOAS), undecylhydroxydioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) and myxothaizol.  相似文献   

3.
The cytochrome bc(1) complex (bc(1)) is a major contributor to the proton motive force across the membrane by coupling electron transfer to proton translocation. The crystal structures of wild type and mutant bc(1) complexes from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides (Rsbc(1)), stabilized with the quinol oxidation (Q(P)) site inhibitor stigmatellin alone or in combination with the quinone reduction (Q(N)) site inhibitor antimycin, were determined. The high quality electron density permitted assignments of a new metal-binding site to the cytochrome c(1) subunit and a number of lipid and detergent molecules. Structural differences between Rsbc(1) and its mitochondrial counterparts are mostly extra membranous and provide a basis for understanding the function of the predominantly longer sequences in the bacterial subunits. Functional implications for the bc(1) complex are derived from analyses of 10 independent molecules in various crystal forms and from comparisons with mitochondrial complexes.  相似文献   

4.
We describe in detail the conformations of the inhibitor stigmatellin in its free form and bound to the ubiquinone-reducing (Q(B)) site of the reaction center and to the ubiquinol-oxidizing (Q(o)) site of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. We present here the first structures of a stereochemically correct stigmatellin in complexes with a bacterial reaction center and the yeast cytochrome bc1 complex. The conformations of the inhibitor bound to the two enzymes are not the same. We focus on the orientations of the stigmatellin side-chain relative to the chromone head group, and on the interaction of the stigmatellin side-chain with these membrane protein complexes. The different conformations of stigmatellin found illustrate the structural variability of the Q sites, which are affected by the same inhibitor. The free rotation about the chi1 dihedral angle is an essential factor for allowing stigmatellin to bind in both the reaction center and the cytochrome bc1 pocket.  相似文献   

5.
We have obtained evidence for conformational communication between ubiquinol oxidation (center P) and ubiquinone reduction (center N) sites of the yeast bc1 complex dimer by analyzing antimycin binding and heme bH reduction at center N in the presence of different center P inhibitors. When stigmatellin was occupying center P, concentration-dependent binding of antimycin occurred only to half of the center N sites. The remaining half of the bc1 complex bound antimycin with a slower rate that was independent of inhibitor concentration, indicating that a slow conformational change needed to occur before half of the enzyme could bind antimycin. In contrast, under conditions where the Rieske protein was not fixed proximal to heme bL at center P, all center N sites bound antimycin with fast and concentration-dependent kinetics. Additionally, the extent of fast cytochrome b reduction by menaquinol through center N in the presence of stigmatellin was approximately half of that observed when myxothiazol was bound at center P. The reduction kinetics of the bH heme by decylubiquinol in the presence of stigmatellin or myxothiazol were also consistent with a model in which fixation of the Rieske protein close to heme bL in both monomers allows rapid binding of ligands only to one center N. Decylubiquinol at high concentrations was able to abolish the biphasic binding of antimycin in the presence of stigmatellin but did not slow down antimycin binding rates. These results are discussed in terms of half-of-the-sites activity of the dimeric bc1 complex.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidized cytochrome c(1) in photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) reversibly binds cyanide with surprisingly high, micromolar affinity. The binding dramatically lowers the redox midpoint potential of heme c(1) and inhibits steady-state turnover activity of the enzyme. As cytochrome c(1), an auxiliary redox center of the high-potential chain of cytochrome bc(1), does not interact directly with the catalytic quinone/quinol binding sites Q(o) and Q(i), cyanide introduces a novel, Q-site independent locus of inhibition. This is the first report of a reversible inhibitor that manipulates the energetics and electron transfers of the high-potential redox chain of cytochrome bc(1), while maintaining quinone substrate catalytic sites in an intact form.  相似文献   

7.
A key issue concerning the primary conversion (Q(O)) site function in the cytochrome bc(1) complex is the stoichiometry of ubiquinone/ubihydroquinone occupancy. Previous evidence suggests that the Q(O) site is able to accommodate two ubiquinone molecules, the double occupancy model [Ding, H., Robertson, D. E., Daldal, F., and Dutton, P. L. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 3144-3158]. In the recently reported crystal structures of the cytochrome bc(1) complex, no electron density was identified in the Q(O) site that could be ascribed to ubiquinone. To provide further insight into this issue, we have manipulated the cytochrome bc(1) complex Q(O) site occupancy in photosynthetic membranes from Rhodobacter capsulatus by using inhibitor titrations and ubiquinone extraction to modulate the amount of ubiquinone bound in the site. The nature of the Q(O) site occupants was probed via the sensitivity of the reduced [2Fe-2S] cluster electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra to modulation of Q(O) site occupancy. Diphenylamine (DPA) and methoxyacrylate (MOA)-stilbene are known Q(O) site inhibitors of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. Addition of stoichiometric concentrations of MOA-stilbene or excess DPA to cytochrome bc(1) complexes with natural levels of ubiquinone elicits the same change in the [2Fe-2S] cluster EPR spectra; the g(x)() resonance broadens and shifts from 1. 800 to 1.783. This is exactly the same signal as that obtained when there is only one ubiquinone present in the Q(O) site. Furthermore, addition of MOA-stilbene or DPA to the cytochrome bc(1) complex depleted of ubiquinone does not alter the [2Fe-2S] cluster EPR spectral line shapes, which remain indicative of one ubiquinone or zero ubiquinones in the Q(O) site, with broad g(x)() resonances at 1. 783 or 1.765, respectively. The results are quite consistent with the Q(O) site double occupancy model, in which MOA-stilbene and DPA inhibit by displacing one, but not both, of the Q(O) site ubiquinones.  相似文献   

8.
The chicken mitochondrial ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc(1) complex) is inhibited by Zn(2+) ions, but with higher K(i) ( approximately 3 microM) than the corresponding bovine enzyme. When equilibrated with mother liquor containing 200 microM ZnCl(2) for 7 days, the crystalline chicken bc(1) complex specifically binds Zn(2+) at 4 sites representing two sites on each monomer in the dimer. These two sites are close to the stigmatellin-binding site, taken to be center Q(o) of the Q-cycle mechanism, and are candidates for the inhibitory site. One binding site is actually in the hydrophobic channel between the Q(o) site and the bulk lipid phase, and may interfere with quinone binding. The other is in a hydrophilic area between cytochromes b and c(1), and might interfere with the egress of protons from the Q(o) site to the intermembrane aqueous medium. No zinc was bound near the putative proteolytic active site of subunits 1 and 2 (homologous to mitochondrial processing peptidase) under these conditions.  相似文献   

9.
The transfer of electrons and protons between membrane-bound respiratory complexes is facilitated by lipid-soluble redox-active quinone molecules (Q). This work presents a structural analysis of the quinone-binding site (Q-site) identified in succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR) from Escherichia coli. SQR, often referred to as Complex II or succinate dehydrogenase, is a functional member of the Krebs cycle and the aerobic respiratory chain and couples the oxidation of succinate to fumarate with the reduction of quinone to quinol (QH(2)). The interaction between ubiquinone and the Q-site of the protein appears to be mediated solely by hydrogen bonding between the O1 carbonyl group of the quinone and the side chain of a conserved tyrosine residue. In this work, SQR was co-crystallized with the ubiquinone binding-site inhibitor Atpenin A5 (AA5) to confirm the binding position of the inhibitor and reveal additional structural details of the Q-site. The electron density for AA5 was located within the same hydrophobic pocket as ubiquinone at, however, a different position within the pocket. AA5 was bound deeper into the site prompting further assessment using protein-ligand docking experiments in silico. The initial interpretation of the Q-site was re-evaluated in the light of the new SQR-AA5 structure and protein-ligand docking data. Two binding positions, the Q(1)-site and Q(2)-site, are proposed for the E. coli SQR quinone-binding site to explain these data. At the Q(2)-site, the side chains of a serine and histidine residue are suitably positioned to provide hydrogen bonding partners to the O4 carbonyl and methoxy groups of ubiquinone, respectively. This allows us to propose a mechanism for the reduction of ubiquinone during the catalytic turnover of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated in detail the effects of dibromothymoquinone (2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, DBMIB) on the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 complex) from bovine heart mitochondria. The inhibitory action of DBMIB on the steady-state activity of the bc1 complex is related to the specific binding of the quinone to the purified enzymatic complex. At concentrations higher than 10 mol per mol of the enzyme, DBMIB is able to stimulate an antimycin-insensitive reduction of cytochrome c catalyzed by the bc1 complex. In accordance with kinetic data showing a competition by endogenous ubiquinone in the inhibitory action, DBMIB can be considered as a product-like inhibitor of the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity. The site of specific binding of dibromothymoquinone in the bc1 complex enables it to interact with the iron-sulphur center of the enzyme, as indicated by changes induced in the EPR spectrum of the center. However, the inhibitor also directly interacts with cytochrome b, promoting a fast chemical oxidation of the reduced heme center. In spite of these effects, DBMIB has been found not to exert significant effects on the first turnover of the fully oxidized bc1 complex, as monitored by the rapid reduction of both cytochromes b and c1 by ubiquinol-1. In the presence of antimycin, only a stimulation of cytochrome c1 reduction, in parallel to an enhanced cytochrome b reoxidation, is observed. Moreover, DBMIB does not affect the oxidant-induced extra cytochrome b reduction in the presence of antimycin. On the basis of the evidences suggesting a competition with the endogenous ubiquinone in the redox cycle of the bc1 complex, a model is proposed for the mechanism of DBMIB inhibition. Such model can also explain at the molecular level the redox bypass induced by dibromothymoquinone in the whole respiratory chain (Degli Esposti, M., Rugolo, M. and Lenaz, G. (1983) FEBS Lett. 156, 15-19).  相似文献   

11.
Quinoprotein alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) of acetic acid bacteria is a membrane-bound enzyme that functions as the primary dehydrogenase in the ethanol oxidase respiratory chain. It consists of three subunits and has a pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) in the active site and four heme c moieties as electron transfer mediators. Of these, three heme c sites and a further site have been found to be involved in ubiquinone (Q) reduction and ubiquinol (QH2) oxidation respectively (Matsushita et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1409, 154-164 (1999)). In this study, it was found that ADH solubilized and purified with dodecyl maltoside, but not with Triton X-100, had a tightly bound Q, and thus two different ADHs, one having the tightly bound Q (Q-bound ADH) and Q-free ADH, could be obtained. The Q-binding sites of both the ADHs were characterized using specific inhibitors, a substituted phenol PC16 (a Q analog inhibitor) and antimycin A. Based on the inhibition kinetics of Q2 reductase and ubiquinol-2 (Q2H2) oxidase activities, it was suggested that there are one and two PC16-binding sites in Q-bound ADH and Q-free ADH respectively. On the other hand, with antimycin A, only one binding site was found for Q2 reductase and Q2H2 oxidase activities, irrespective of the presence of bound Q. These results suggest that ADH has a high-affinity Q binding site (QH) besides low-affinity Q reduction and QH2 oxidation sites, and that the bound Q in the QH site is involved in the electron transfer between heme c moieties and bulk Q or QH2 in the low-affinity sites.  相似文献   

12.
The ubiquinone complement of Rhodobacter capsulatus chromatophore membranes has been characterized by its isooctane solvent extractability and electrochemistry; we find that the main ubiquinone pool (Qpool) amounts to about 80% of the total ubiquinone and has an Em7 value close to 90 mV. To investigate the interactions of ubiquinone with the cyt bc1 complex, we have examined the distinctive EPR line shapes of the [2Fe-2S] cluster of the cyt bc1 complex when the Qpool-cyt bc1 complex interactions are modulated by changing the numbers of Q or QH2 present (by solvent extraction and reconstitution), by the exposure of the [2Fe-2S] to the Qpool in different redox states, by the presence of inhibitors specific for the Qo site (myxothiazol and stigmatellin) and Qi site (antimycin), and by site-specific mutations of side chains of the cyt b polypeptide (mutants F144L and F144G) previously identified as important for Qo site structure. Evidence suggests that the Qo site can accommodate two ubiquinone molecules. One (designated Qos) is bound relatively strongly and is second only to the ubiquinone of the QA site of the reaction center in its resistance to solvent extraction. In this strong interaction, the Qo site binds Q and QH2 with approximately equal affinities. Their bound states are distinguished by their effects on the [2Fe-2S] cluster spectral feature at gx at 1.783 (Q) and gx at 1.777 (QH2); titration of the line-shape change reveals an Em7 value of approximately 95 mV. The other molecule (Qow) is bound more weakly, in the same range as the ubiquinone of the QB site of the reaction center. Again, the affinities of the Q form (gx at 1.800) and QH2 form (gx at 1.777) are nearly equal, and the Em7 value measured is approximately 80 mV. These results are discussed in terms of earlier EPR analyses of the cyt bc1 complexes of other systems. A Qo site double-occupancy model is considered that builds on the previous model based on Qo site mutants [Robertson, D. E., Daldal, F.,& Dutton, P. L. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 11249-11260] and includes the recent suggestion that two of the [2F3-2S] cluster ligands of the R. capsulatus cyt bc1 complex are histidines [Gurbiel, R. J. Ohnishi, T., Robertson, D. E. Daldal, F., & Hoffman, B. M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 11579-11584]. We speculate that the cyt bc1 complex complexes a full enzymatic turnover without necessary exchange of ubiquinone with the Qpool.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of pH and inhibitors on the spectra and redox properties of the haems b of the bc1 complex of beef heart submitochondrial particles were investigated. The major findings were: (1) both haems have a weakly redox-linked protonatable group with pKox and pKred of around 6 and 8; (2) at pH values above 7, haem bH becomes heterogeneous in its redox behaviour. This heterogeneity is removed by the Qi site inhibitors antimycin A, funiculosin and HQNO, but not by the Qo site inhibitors myxothiazol or stigmatellin; (3) of all inhibitors tested only funiculosin had a large effect on the Em/pH profile of either haem b. In all cases where definite effects were found, the haem most affected was that thought to be closest to the site of inhibitor binding; (4) spectral shifts of haem groups caused by inhibitor binding were usually, but not always, of the haem group closest to the binding site; (5) titrations with succinate/fumarate were in reasonable agreement with redox-mediated data provided that strict anaerobiosis was maintained. Apparent large shifts of haem midpoint potentials with antimycin A and myxothiazol could be produced in aerobic succinate/fumarate titrations in the presence of cyanide, as already reported in the literature, but these were artefactual; (6) the heterogeneous haem bH titration behaviour can be simulated with a model similar to that proposed by Salerno et al. (J. Biol. Chem. (1989) 264, 15398-15403) in which there is redox interaction between haem bH and ubiquinone species bound at the Qi site. Simulations closely fit both the haem bH data and known semiquinone data only if it is assumed that semiquinone bound to oxidised haem bH is EPR-silent.  相似文献   

14.
Following addition of myxothiazol to antimycin-treated chromatophores from Rhodobacter sphaeroides poised at an ambient redox potential (E(h)) of approximately 300 mV, the amplitude of the flash-induced cytochrome c(1) oxidation in the ms range increased, indicating a decrease in the availability of electrons from the immediate donor to c(1), the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP). Because the effect was seen only over the limited E(h) range, we conclude that it is due to a decrease in the apparent midpoint redox potential (E(m)) of the ISP by about 40 mV on addition of myxothiazol. This is in line with the change in E(m) previously seen in direct redox titrations. Our results show that the reduced ISP binds with quinone at the Q(o) site with a higher affinity than does the oxidized ISP. The displacement of ubiquinone by myxothiazol leads to elimination of this preferential binding of the ISP reduced form and results in a shift in the midpoint potential of ISP to a more negative value. A simple hypothesis to explain this effect is that myxothiazol prevents formation of hydrogen bond of ubiquinone with the reduced ISP. We conclude that all Q(o) site occupants (ubiquinone, UHDBT, stigmatellin) that form hydrogen bonds with the reduced ISP shift the apparent E(m) of the ISP in the same direction to more positive values. Inhibitors that bind in the domain of the Q(o) site proximal to heme b(L) (myxothiazol, MOA-stilbene) and displace ubiquinone from the site cause a decrease in E(m) of ISP. We present a new formalism for treatment of the relation between E(m) change and the binding constants involved, which simplifies analysis. Using this formalism, we estimated that binding free energies for hydrogen bond formation with the Q(o) site occupant, range from the largest value of approximately 23 kJ mol(-1) in the presence of stigmatellin (appropriate for the buried hydrogen bond shown by structures), to a value of approximately 3.5 kJ mol(-1) in the native complex. We discuss this range of values in the context of a model in which the native structure constrains the interaction of ISP with the Q(o) site occupant so as to favor dissociation and the faster kinetics of unbinding necessary for rapid turnover.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome bc(1) is an integral membrane protein complex essential for cellular respiration and photosynthesis; it couples electron transfer from quinol to cytochrome c to proton translocation across the membrane. Specific bc(1) inhibitors have not only played crucial roles in elucidating the mechanism of bc(1) function but have also provided leads for the development of novel antibiotics. Crystal structures of bovine bc(1) in complex with the specific Q(o) site inhibitors azoxystrobin, MOAS, myxothiazol, stigmatellin and 5-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole were determined. Interactions, conformational changes and possible mechanisms of resistance, specific to each inhibitor, were defined. Residues and secondary structure elements that are capable of discriminating different classes of Q(o) site inhibitors were identified for the cytochrome b subunit. Directions in the displacement of the cd1 helix of cytochrome b subunit in response to various Q(o) site inhibitors were correlated to the binary conformational switch of the extrinsic domain of the iron-sulfur protein subunit. The new structural information, together with structures previously determined, provide a basis that, combined with biophysical and mutational data, suggest a modification to the existing classification of bc(1) inhibitors. bc(1) inhibitors are grouped into three classes: class P inhibitors bind to the Q(o) site, class N inhibitors bind to the Q(i) site and the class PN inhibitors target both sites. Class P contains two subgroups, Pm and Pf, that are distinct by their ability to induce mobile or fixed conformation of iron-sulfur protein.  相似文献   

16.
The cytochrome bc1 complex resides in the inner membrane of mitochondria and transfers electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c. This electron transfer is coupled to the translocation of protons across the membrane by the protonmotive Q cycle mechanism. This mechanism topographically separates reduction of quinone and reoxidation of quinol at sites on opposite sites of the membrane, referred to as center N (Qn site) and center P (Qp site), respectively. Both are located on cytochrome b, a transmembrane protein of the bc1 complex that is encoded on the mitochondrial genome. To better understand the parameters that affect ligand binding at the Qn site, we applied the Qn site inhibitor ilicicolin H to select for mutations conferring resistance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The screen resulted in seven different single amino acid substitutions in cytochrome b rendering the yeast resistant to the inhibitor. Six of the seven mutations have not been previously linked to inhibitor resistance. Ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activities of mitochondrial membranes isolated from the mutants confirmed that the differences in sensitivity toward ilicicolin H originated in the cytochrome bc1 complex. Comparative in vivo studies using the known Qn site inhibitors antimycin and funiculosin showed little cross-resistance, indicating different modes of binding of these inhibitors at center N of the bc1 complex.  相似文献   

17.
We have examined the pre-steady-state kinetics and thermodynamic properties of the b hemes in variants of the yeast cytochrome bc1 complex that have mutations in the quinone reductase site (center N). Trp-30 is a highly conserved residue, forming a hydrogen bond with the propionate on the high potential b heme (bH heme). The substitution by a cysteine (W30C) lowers the redox potential of the heme and an apparent consequence is a lower rate of electron transfer between quinol and heme at center N. Leu-198 is also in close proximity to the b(H) heme and a L198F mutation alters the spectral properties of the heme but has only minor effects on its redox properties or the electron transfer kinetics at center N. Substitution of Met-221 by glutamine or glutamate results in the loss of a hydrophobic interaction that stabilizes the quinone ligands. Ser-20 and Gln-22 form a hydrogen-bonding network that includes His-202, one of the carbonyl groups of the ubiquinone ring, and an active-site water. A S20T mutation has long-range structural effects on center P and thermodynamic effects on both b hemes. The other mutations (M221E, M221Q, Q22E and Q22T) do not affect the ubiquinol oxidation kinetics at center P, but do modify the electron transfer reactions at center N to various extents. The pre-steady reduction kinetics suggest that these mutations alter the binding of quinone ligands at center N, possibly by widening the binding pocket and thus increasing the distance between the substrate and the bH heme. These results show that one can distinguish between the contribution of structural and thermodynamic factors to center N function.  相似文献   

18.
Antimycin A (antimycin), one of the first known and most potent inhibitors of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, binds to the quinone reduction site of the cytochrome bc1 complex. Structure-activity relationship studies have shown that the N-formylamino-salicyl-amide group is responsible for most of the binding specificity, and suggested that a low pKa for the phenolic OH group and an intramolecular H-bond between that OH and the carbonyl O of the salicylamide linkage are important. Two previous X-ray structures of antimycin bound to vertebrate bc1 complex gave conflicting results. A new structure reported here of the bovine mitochondrial bc1 complex at 2.28 A resolution with antimycin bound, allows us for the first time to reliably describe the binding of antimycin and shows that the intramolecular hydrogen bond described in solution and in the small-molecule structure is replaced by one involving the NH rather than carbonyl O of the amide linkage, with rotation of the amide group relative to the aromatic ring. The phenolic OH and formylamino N form H-bonds with conserved Asp228 of cytochrome b, and the formylamino O H-bonds via a water molecule to Lys227. A strong density, the right size and shape for a diatomic molecule is found between the other side of the dilactone ring and the alphaA helix.  相似文献   

19.
The protonation state of residues around the Q(o) binding site of the cytochrome bc(1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans and their interaction with bound quinone(s) was studied by a combined electrochemical and FTIR difference spectroscopic approach. Site-directed mutations of two groups of conserved residues were investigated: (a) acidic side chains located close to the surface and thought to participate in a water chain leading up to the heme b(L) edge, and (b) residues located in the vicinity of this site. Interestingly, most of the mutants retain a high degree of catalytic activity. E295Q, E81Q and Y297F showed reduced stigmatellin affinity. On the basis of electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectra, we suggest that E295 and D278 are protonated in the oxidized form or that their mutation perturbs protonated residues. Mutations Y302, Y297, E81 and E295, directly perturb signals from the oxidized quinone and of the protein backbone. By monitoring the interaction with the inhibitor stigmatellin for the wild-type enzyme at various redox states, interactions of the bound stigmatellin with amino acid side chains such as protonated acidic residues and the backbone were observed, as well as difference signals arising from the redox active inhibitor itself and the replaced quinone. The infrared difference spectra of the above Q(o) site mutations in the presence of stigmatellin confirm the previously established role of E295 as a direct interaction partner in the enzyme from P.denitrificans as well. The protonated residue E295 is proposed to change the hydrogen-bonding environment upon stigmatellin binding in the oxidized form, and is deprotonated in the reduced form. Of the residues located close to the surface, D278 remains protonated and unperturbed in the oxidized form but its frequency shifts in the reduced form. The mechanistic implications of our observations are discussed, together with previous inhibitor binding data, and referred to the published X-ray structures.  相似文献   

20.
Cooley JW  Ohnishi T  Daldal F 《Biochemistry》2005,44(31):10520-10532
Multiple instances of low-potential electron-transport pathway inhibitors that affect the structure of the cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex to varying degrees, ranging from changes in hydroquinone (QH(2)) oxidation and cyt c(1) reduction kinetics to proteolytic accessibility of the hinge region of the iron-sulfur-containing subunit (Fe/S protein), have been reported. However, no instance has been documented of any ensuing change on the environment(s) of the [2Fe-2S] cluster. In this work, this issue was addressed in detail by taking advantage of the increased spectral and spatial resolution obtainable with orientation-dependent electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic analysis of ordered membrane preparations. For the first time, perturbation of the low-potential electron-transport pathway by Q(i)-site inhibitors or various mutations was shown to change the EPR spectra of both the cyt b hemes and the [2Fe-2S] cluster of the Fe/S protein. In particular, two interlinked effects of Q(i)-site modifications on the Fe/S subunit, one changing the local environment of its [2Fe-2S] cluster and a second affecting the mobility of this subunit, are revealed. Remarkably, different inhibitors and mutations at or near the Q(i) site induce these two effects differently, indicating that the events occurring at the Q(i) site affect the global structure of the cyt bc(1). Furthermore, occupancy of discrete Q(i)-site subdomains differently impede the location of the Fe/S protein at the Q(o) site. These findings led us to propose that antimycin A and HQNO mimic the presence of QH(2) and Q at the Q(i) site, respectively. Implications of these findings in respect to the Q(o)-Q(i) sites communications and to multiple turnovers of the cyt bc(1) are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号