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1.
The nuclear gene coding for the 20.8-kDa subunit of the membrane arm of respiratory chain NADH:ubiquinone reductase (Complex I) fromNeurospora crassa, nuo-20.8, was localized on linkage group I of the fungal genome. A genomic DNA fragment containing this gene was cloned and a duplication was created in a strain ofN. crassa by transformation. To generate RIP (repeat-induced point) mutations in the duplicated sequence, the transformant was crossed with another strain carrying an auxotrophic marker on chromosome I. To increase the chance of finding an isolate with a non-functionalnuo-20.8 gene, random progeny from the cross were selected against this auxotrophy since RIP of the target gene will only occur in the nucleus carrying the duplication. Among these, we isolated and characterised a mutant strain that lacks the 20.8 kDa mitochondrial protein, indicating that this cysteine-rich polypeptide is not essential. Nevertheless, the absence of the 20.8-kDa subunit prevents the full assembly of complex I. It appears that the peripheral arm and two intermediates of the membrane arm of the enzyme are still formed in the mutant mitochondria. The NADH:ubiquinone reductase activity of sonicated mitochondria from the mutant is rotenone insensitive. Electron microscopy of mutant mitochondria does not reveal any alteration in the structure or numbers of the organelles.  相似文献   

2.
We determined the primary structure of a 9.6-kDa subunit of the respiratory chain NADH:ubiquinone reductase (complex I) from Neurospora crassa mitochondria and found a close relationship between this subunit and the bacterial or chloroplast acyl-carrier protein. The degree of sequence identity amounts to 80% in a region of 19 residues around the serine to which the phosphopantetheine is bound. The N-terminal presequence of the subunit has the characteristic features of a mitochondrial import sequence. We cultivated the auxotroph pan-2 mutant of N. crassa in the presence of [14C]pantothenate and recovered all radioactivity incorporated into mitochondrial protein in the 9.6-kDa subunit of complex I. We cultivated N. crassa in the presence of chloramphenicol to accumulate the nuclear-encoded peripheral arm of complex I. This pre-assembled arm also contains the 9.6-kDa subunit. These results demonstrate that an acyl-carrier protein with pantothenate as prosthetic group is a constituent part of complex I in N. crassa.  相似文献   

3.
The existence of specific respiratory supercomplexes in mitochondria of most organisms has gained much momentum. However, its functional significance is still poorly understood. The availability of many deletion mutants in complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) of Neurospora crassa, distinctly affected in the assembly process, offers unique opportunities to analyze the biogenesis of respiratory supercomplexes. Herein, we describe the role of complex I in assembly of respiratory complexes and supercomplexes as suggested by blue and colorless native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry analyses of mildly solubilized mitochondria from the wild type and eight deletion mutants. As an important refinement of the fungal respirasome model, we found that the standard respiratory chain of N. crassa comprises putative complex I dimers in addition to I-III-IV and III-IV supercomplexes. Three Neurospora mutants able to assemble a complete complex I, lacking only the disrupted subunit, have respiratory supercomplexes, in particular I-III-IV supercomplexes and complex I dimers, like the wild-type strain. Furthermore, we were able to detect the I-III-IV supercomplexes in the nuo51 mutant with no overall enzymatic activity, representing the first example of inactive respirasomes. In addition, III-IV supercomplexes were also present in strains lacking an assembled complex I, namely, in four membrane arm subunit mutants as well as in the peripheral arm nuo30.4 mutant. In membrane arm mutants, high-molecular-mass species of the 30.4-kDa peripheral arm subunit comigrating with III-IV supercomplexes and/or the prohibitin complex were detected. The data presented herein suggest that the biogenesis of complex I is linked with its assembly into supercomplexes.  相似文献   

4.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, the respiratory chain complex I of mitochondria, is an assembly of some 25 nuclear-encoded and 7 mitochondrially encoded subunits. The complex has an overall L-shaped structure formed by a peripheral arm and an elongated membrane arm. The peripheral arm containing one FMN and at least three iron-sulphur clusters constitutes the NADH dehydrogenase segment of the electron pathway. The membrane arm with at least one iron-sulphur cluster constitutes the ubiquinone reducing segment. We are studying the assembly of the complex in Neurospora crassa. By disrupting the gene of a nuclear-encoded subunit of the membrane arm a mutant was generated that cannot form complex I. The mutant rather pre-assembles the peripheral arm with all redox groups and the ability to catalyse NADH oxidation by artificial electron acceptors. The final assembly of the membrane arm is blocked in the mutant leading to accumulation of complementary assembly intermediates. One intermediate is associated with a protein that is not present in the fully assembled complex I. The results demonstrate that the two arms of complex I are assembled independently on separate pathways, and gave a first insight into the assembly pathway of the membrane arm. It is also shown for the first time that the obligate aerobic fungus N. crassa can grow and respire without an intact complex I. Gene replacement in this fungus is therefore a tool for investigation of this complex.  相似文献   

5.
We have isolated and characterised the nuclear gene that codes for the 30.4-kDa subunit of the peripheral arm of complex I from Neurospora crassa. The single-copy gene was localised on chromosome VI of the fungal genome by restriction fragment length polymorphism mapping. An extra copy of the gene was introduced into a strain of N. crassa by transformation. This strain was crossed with another strain in order to inactivate, by repeat-induced point mutations, both copies of the duplication carried by the parental transformant. Ascospore progeny from the cross were analysed and a mutant strain lacking the 30.4-kDa protein, nuo30.4, was isolated and further characterised. The mutant appears to assemble the membrane arm of complex I, while formation of the peripheral arm is prevented. Nevertheless, the mutant grows reasonably well – indicating that this well conserved protein is not essential for vegetative growth – and is able to mate with other strains both as male or female. Strains with multiple mutations are readily obtained from heterozygous crosses between different complex I mutants of N. crassa. On the other hand, homozygous crosses between several mutants, including nuo30.4, fail to produce ascospores. These results suggest that complex I plays an essential role during the sexual phase of the life cycle of the fungus. Received: 24 February 1997 / Accepted: 23 September 1997  相似文献   

6.
We have cloned the nuclear gene encoding the 24-kDa iron-sulphur subunit of complex I from Neurospora crassa. The gene was inactivated in vivo by repeat-induced point-mutations, and mutant strains lacking the 24-kDa protein were isolated. Mutant nuo24 appears to assemble an almost intact complex I only lacking the 24-kDa subunit. However, we also found reduced levels of the NADH-binding, 51-kDa subunit of the enzyme. Surprisingly, the complex I from the nuo24 strain lacks NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity. In agreement with this, the respiration of intact mitochondria or mitochondrial membranes from the mutant strain is insensitive to rotenone inhibition. These results suggest that the nuo24 complex is not functioning in electron transfer and the 24-kDa protein is absolutely required for complex I activity. This phenotype may explain the findings that the 24-kDa iron-sulphur protein is reduced or absent in human mitochondrial diseases. In addition, selected substitutions of cysteine to alanine residues in the 24-kDa protein suggest that binding of the iron-sulphur centre is a requisite for protein assembly.  相似文献   

7.
H Heinrich  J E Azevedo  S Werner 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11420-11424
A small polypeptide subunit of the NADH:ubiquinone reductase (complex I) from Neurospora crassa has been identified by photoaffinity labeling to participate in the binding of ubiquinone [Heinrich, H., & Werner, S. (1992) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. This polypeptide is further characterized by its primary structure and by an assessment of its localization within complex I. A lambda gt11 cDNA expression library was screened using a specific antibody directed against this individual subunit of complex I. Two groups of clones, coding for polypeptide subunits of the appropriate apparent molecular weight, were isolated. One group was shown to contain the relevant recombinants. The derived amino acid sequence for the 9.5-kDa ubiquinone-binding polypeptide shows a similarity with a putative ubiquinol-binding subunit (also a 9.5-kDa polypeptide) from complex III of bovine heart [Usui, S., Yu, L., & Tu, C.-A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4618-4626]. The polypeptide has a hydrophobic stretch of a sufficient length to span the membrane. It resists against extraction with NaBr or Na2CO3, and therefore probably is buried in the so-called hydrophobic membrane portion of complex I. This nuclearly-encoded subunit lacks a typical cleavable presequence and is imported into isolated mitochondria by a membrane potential-dependent process.  相似文献   

8.
Respiratory chains of bacteria and mitochondria contain closely related forms of the proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, or complex I. The bacterial complex I consists of 14 subunits, whereas the mitochondrial complex contains some 25 extra subunits in addition to the homologues of the bacterial subunits. One of these extra subunits with a molecular mass of 40 kDa belongs to a heterogeneous family of reductases/isomerases with a conserved nucleotide binding site. We deleted this subunit in Neurospora crassa by gene disruption. In the mutant nuo 40, a complex I lacking the 40 kDa subunit is assembled. The mutant complex I does not contain tightly bound NADPH present in wild-type complex I. This NADPH cofactor is not connected to the respiratory electron pathway of complex I. The mutant complex has normal NADH dehydrogenase activity and contains the redox groups known for wild-type complex I, one flavin mononucleotide and four iron-sulfur clusters detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. In the mutant complex these groups are all readily reduced by NADH. However, the mutant complex is not capable of reducing ubiquinone. A recently described redox group identified in wild-type complex I by UV-visible spectroscopy is not detectable in the mutant complex. We propose that the reductase/isomerase subunit with its NADPH cofactor takes part in the biosynthesis of this new redox group.  相似文献   

9.
Differences between the respiratory chain of the fungus Paracoccidioides brasiliensis and its mammalian host are reported. Respiration, membrane potential, and oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria from P. brasiliensis spheroplasts were evaluated in situ, and the presence of a complete (Complex I–V) functional respiratory chain was demonstrated. In succinate-energized mitochondria, ADP induced a transition from resting to phosphorylating respiration. The presence of an alternative NADH–ubiquinone oxidoreductase was indicated by: (i) the ability to oxidize exogenous NADH and (ii) the lack of sensitivity to rotenone and presence of sensitivity to flavone. Malate/NAD+-supported respiration suggested the presence of either a mitochondrial pyridine transporter or a glyoxylate pathway contributing to NADH and/or succinate production. Partial sensitivity of NADH/succinate-supported respiration to antimycin A and cyanide, as well as sensitivity to benzohydroxamic acids, suggested the presence of an alternative oxidase in the yeast form of the fungus. An increase in activity and gene expression of the alternative NADH dehydrogenase throughout the yeast’s exponential growth phase was observed. This increase was coupled with a decrease in Complex I activity and gene expression of its subunit 6. These results support the existence of alternative respiratory chain pathways in addition to Complex I, as well as the utilization of NADH-linked substrates by P. brasiliensis. These specific components of the respiratory chain could be useful for further research and development of pharmacological agents against the fungus.  相似文献   

10.
A partially assembled complex I in NAD4-deficient mitochondria of maize   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The proton-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (respiratory complex I) consists of at least 32 subunits in higher plants, nine of which are mitochondrially encoded (NAD 1–7, NAD4L, NAD9). Complex I (CI) has been analyzed from a mitochondrial mutant of maize, NCS2, that carries a deletion for the 3′ end of the nad4 gene. Mitochondria from highly defective, near-homoplasmic mutant plants have only trace amounts of the normal complex I. Instead, a reduced amount of a smaller complex, which also exhibits NADH dehydrogenase activity, is detected on ‘blue-native’ polyacrylamide gels. Subunits of 76 kDa, 40 kDa and 55 kDa, as well as NAD7 and NAD9, have been identified in the subcomplex by their cross-reactivity with heterologous antisera. The corresponding subunits in Neurospora are localized in a ‘peripheral arm’ of CI, which is known to assemble independently of a ‘membrane arm’. The maize NCS2 CI subcomplex is loosely bound to the membrane and is missing several subunits that could be membrane components. Thus, the mutant CI subcomplex may consist of a peripheral arm. A reduction in the steady-state levels of NAD7 and NAD9 in NCS2 mitochondria occurs despite normal rates of biosynthesis and there is a concomitant decrease of the nuclear encoded 76 kDa subunit. The reduction in CI-associated NADH dehydrogenase activity in the nad4 -deficient NCS2 mutant mitochondria is not associated with a compensatory increase in the activities or amounts of the putative ‘exogenous’ NAD(P)H dehydrogenases that are found in plant mitochondria.  相似文献   

11.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) was purified from bovine heart mitochondria by solubilization with n-dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (lauryl maltoside), ammonium sulfate fractionation, and chromatography on Mono Q in the presence of the detergent. Its subunit composition was very similar to complex I purified by conventional means. Complex I was dissociated in the presence of N,N-dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide and beta-mercaptoethanol, and two subcomplexes, I alpha and I beta, were isolated by chromatography. Subcomplex I alpha catalyzes electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone-1. It is composed of about 22 different and mostly hydrophilic subunits and contains 2.0 nmol of FMN/mg of protein. Among its subunits is the 51-kDa subunit, which binds FMN and NADH and probably contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster also. Three other potential Fe-S proteins, the 75- and 24-kDa subunits and a 23-kDa subunit (N-terminal sequence TYKY), are also present. All of the Fe-S clusters detectable by EPR in complex I, including cluster 2, are found in subcomplex I alpha. The line shapes of the EPR spectra of the Fe-S clusters are slightly broadened relative to spectra measured on complex I purified by conventional means, and the quinone reductase activity is insensitive to rotenone. Similar changes were found in samples of the intact chromatographically purified complex I, or in complex I prepared by the conventional method and then subjected to chromatography in the presence of lauryl maltoside. Subcomplex I beta contains about 15 different subunits. The sequences of many of them contain hydrophobic segments that could be membrane spanning, including at least two mitochondrial gene products, ND4 and ND5. The role of subcomplex I beta in the intact complex remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

12.
A 3,345-bp fragment of Dictyostelium discoideum mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been sequenced. This fragment contained the 80-kDa subunit of complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase), encoding a predicted amino acid sequence of 688 residues and a molecular mass of 79,805 daltons which is nuclear encoded in other metazoa. The C-terminus of the D. discoideum complex I gene shared a 10-bp overlap with NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase chain 5 (ND5), while 21 by 5 were three tRNA genes (two isoleucine and a histidine) and a further 25 by 5 of these genes is the partial sequence (104 residues) of an unidentified open reading frame (ORF104). Both the 80-kDa subunit and the ORF104 were hydrophilic and highly charged, suggesting they are not membrane associated, unlike most mitochondrially encoded proteins in the metazoa. Sequence analysis of the 80-kDa subunit, its adjacent ND5 gene, and ORF104 indicates the universal stop codon TGA, which codes for tryptophan in nearly all nonplant mtDNA, is either unassigned or coding for a stop codon in D. discoideum. The large size of the mitochondrial genome (54 kb), the lack of intergenic sequence, and the apparent use of the universal code suggest D. discoideum mtDNA may encode many primitive genes that are nuclear encoded in higher organisms.Correspondence to: K.L. WilliamsData deposition: GeneBank  相似文献   

13.
Mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the largest enzyme of the oxidative phosphorylation system, with subunits located at the matrix and membrane domains. In plants, holocomplex I is composed of more than 40 subunits, 9 of which are encoded by the mitochondrial genome (NAD subunits). In Nicotiana sylvestris, a minor 800-kDa subcomplex containing subunits of both domains and displaying NADH dehydrogenase activity is detectable. The NMS1 mutant lacking the membrane arm NAD4 subunit and the CMSII mutant lacking the peripheral NAD7 subunit are both devoid of the holoenzyme. In contrast to CMSII, the 800-kDa subcomplex is present in NMS1 mitochondria, indicating that it could represent an assembly intermediate lacking the distal part of the membrane arm. L-galactono-1,4-lactone dehydrogenase (GLDH), the last enzyme in the plant ascorbate biosynthesis pathway, is associated with the 800-kDa subcomplex but not with the holocomplex. To investigate possible relationships between GLDH and complex I assembly, we characterized an Arabidopsis thaliana gldh insertion mutant. Homozygous gldh mutant plants were not viable in the absence of ascorbate supplementation. Analysis of crude membrane extracts by blue native and two-dimensional SDS-PAGE showed that complex I accumulation was strongly prevented in leaves and roots of Atgldh plants, whereas other respiratory complexes were found in normal amounts. Our results demonstrate the role of plant GLDH in both ascorbate biosynthesis and complex I accumulation.  相似文献   

14.
Additional characterization of complex I, rotenone-sensitive NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, in the mitochondria of Trypanosoma brucei brucei has been obtained. Both proline:cytochrome c reductase and NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase of procyclic T. brucei were inhibited by the specific inhibitors of complex I rotenone, piericidin A, and capsaicin. These inhibitors had no effect on succinate: cytochrome c reductase activity. Antimycin A, a specific inhibitor of the cytochrome bc1 complex (ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase), blocked almost completely cytochrome c reductase activity with either proline or succinate as electron donor, but had no inhibitory effect on NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity. The rotenone-sensitive NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase of procyclic T. brucei was partially purified by sucrose density centrifugation of mitochondria solubilized with dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside, with an approximately eightfold increase in specific activity compared to that of the mitochondrial membranes. Four polypeptides of the partially purified enzyme were identified as the homologous subunits of complex I (51 kDa, PSST, TYKY, and ND4) by immunoblotting with antibodies raised against subunits of Paracoccus denitrificans and against synthetic peptides predicted from putative complex I subunit genes encoded by mitochondrial and nuclear T. brucei DNA. Blue Native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of T. brucei mitochondrial membrane proteins followed by immunoblotting revealed the presence of a putative complex I with a molecular mass of 600 kDa, which contains a minimum of 11 polypeptides determined by second-dimensional Tricine-SDS/PAGE including the 51 kDa, PSST and TYKY subunits.  相似文献   

15.
An osmotic-remedial, temperature-sensitive conditional mutant (un-24) was generated by Repeat Induced Point mutation (RIP) from a cross between a wild-type N. crassa strain and a strain carrying a approximately 250-kb duplication of the left arm of linkage group II (LGII). The mutation was mapped to the duplicated segment, within 2.6 map units of the heterokaryon incompatibility locus het-6. DNA transformation identified a 3.75-kb fragment that complemented the temperature-sensitive phenotype. A large ORF within this fragment was found to have a high degree of sequence identity to the large subunit of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) from diverse organisms. Conserved amino acids at the active site and the allosteric activity sites are also evident. An unusual feature of the Neurospora sequence is a large insertion near the C-terminus relative to otherwise homologous sequences from other organisms. Three transition mutations, indicative of RIP, were identified in the N-terminal region of the temperature-sensitive mutant allele. One of these mutations results in a non-conservative amino acid substitution within the four-helix bundle that is important in the allosteric control of ribonucleotide reductase activity. This substitution appears to disrupt proper folding of the allosteric activity site during synthesis of the protein.  相似文献   

16.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I ) of the mitochondrial respiratory chain catalyzes the transfer of electrons from NADH to ubiquinone coupled to proton translocation across the membrane. The cDNA sequence of Dunaliella salina mitochondrial NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase 19-kD subunit contains a 682-bp ORF encoding a protein with an apparent molecular mass of 19 kD. The sequence has been submitted to the GenBank database under Accession No. EF566890 (cDNA sequences) and EF566891 (genomic sequence). The deduced amino-acid sequence is 74% identical to Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase 18-kD subunit. The 19-kD subunit mRNA expression was observed in oxygen deficiency, salt treatment, and rotenone treatment with lower levels. It demonstrate that the 19-kD subunit of Complex I from Dunaliella salina is regulated by these stresses .  相似文献   

17.
Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) in mammalian mitochondria is an L-shaped assembly of 44 protein subunits with one arm buried in the inner membrane of the mitochondrion and the orthogonal arm protruding about 100 Å into the matrix. The protruding arm contains the binding sites for NADH, the primary acceptor of electrons flavin mononucleotide (FMN), and a chain of seven iron-sulfur clusters that carries the electrons one at a time from FMN to a coenzyme Q molecule bound in the vicinity of the junction between the two arms. In the structure of the closely related bacterial enzyme from Thermus thermophilus, the quinone is thought to bind in a tunnel that spans the interface between the two arms, with the quinone head group close to the terminal iron-sulfur cluster, N2. The tail of the bound quinone is thought to extend from the tunnel into the lipid bilayer. In the mammalian enzyme, it is likely that this tunnel involves three of the subunits of the complex, ND1, PSST, and the 49-kDa subunit. An arginine residue in the 49-kDa subunit is symmetrically dimethylated on the ω-NG and ω-NG′ nitrogen atoms of the guanidino group and is likely to be close to cluster N2 and to influence its properties. Another arginine residue in the PSST subunit is hydroxylated and probably lies near to the quinone. Both modifications are conserved in mammalian enzymes, and the former is additionally conserved in Pichia pastoris and Paracoccus denitrificans, suggesting that they are functionally significant.  相似文献   

18.
Recent work has revealed cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of the 18-kDa IP subunit of the mammalian complex I of the respiratory chain, encoded by the nuclear NDUFS4 gene (chromosome 5). Phosphorylation of this protein has been shown to take place in fibroblast cultures in vivo, as well as in isolated mitochondria, which in addition to the cytosol also contain, in the inner-membrane matrix fraction, a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Mitochondria appear to have a Ca2+-inhibited phosphatase, which dephosphorylates the 18-kDa phosphoprotein. In fibroblast and myoblast cultures cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of the 18-kDa protein is associated with potent stimulation of complex I and overall respiratory activity with NAD-linked substrates. Mutations in the human NDUFS4 gene have been found, which in the homozygous state are associated with deficiency of complex I and fatal neurological syndrome. In one case consisting of a 5 bp duplication, which destroyed the phosphorylation site, cAMP-dependent activation of complex I was abolished in the patient's fibroblast cultures. In another case consisting of a nonsense mutation, leading to termination of the protein after only 14 residues of the putative mitochondria targeting peptide, a defect in the assembly of complex I was found in fibroblast cultures.  相似文献   

19.
We have analyzed a series of eleven mutations in the 49-kDa protein of mitochondrial complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) from Yarrowia lipolytica to identify functionally important domains in this central subunit. The mutations were selected based on sequence homology with the large subunit of [NiFe] hydrogenases. None of the mutations affected assembly of complex I, all decreased or abolished ubiquinone reductase activity. Several mutants exhibited decreased sensitivities toward ubiquinone-analogous inhibitors. Unexpectedly, seven mutations affected the properties of iron-sulfur cluster N2, a prosthetic group not located in the 49-kDa subunit. In three of these mutants cluster N2 was not detectable by electron-paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The fact that the small subunit of hydrogenase is homologous to the PSST subunit of complex I proposed to host cluster N2 offers a straightforward explanation for the observed, unforeseen effects on this iron-sulfur cluster. We propose that the fold around the hydrogen reactive site of [NiFe] hydrogenase is conserved in the 49-kDa subunit of complex I and has become part of the inhibitor and ubiquinone binding region. We discuss that the fourth ligand of iron-sulfur cluster N2 missing in the PSST subunit may be provided by the 49-kDa subunit.  相似文献   

20.
Proton pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the most complicated and least understood enzyme of the respiratory chain. All redox prosthetic groups reside in the peripheral arm of the L-shaped structure. The NADH oxidation domain harbouring the FMN cofactor is connected via a chain of iron–sulfur clusters to the ubiquinone reduction site that is located in a large pocket formed by the PSST- and 49-kDa subunits of complex I. An access path for ubiquinone and different partially overlapping inhibitor binding regions were defined within this pocket by site directed mutagenesis. A combination of biochemical and single particle analysis studies suggests that the ubiquinone reduction site is located well above the membrane domain. Therefore, direct coupling mechanisms seem unlikely and the redox energy must be converted into a conformational change that drives proton pumping across the membrane arm. It is not known which of the subunits and how many are involved in proton translocation. Complex I is a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are predominantly formed by electron transfer from FMNH2. Mitochondrial complex I can cycle between active and deactive forms that can be distinguished by the reactivity towards divalent cations and thiol-reactive agents. The physiological role of this phenomenon is yet unclear but it could contribute to the regulation of complex I activity in-vivo.  相似文献   

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