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1.
Na+ is translocated at NADH:quinone oxidoreductase segment in the respiratory chain of Vibrio alginolyticus 总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13
The coupling site of the Na+ pump to the respiratory chain of Vibrio alginolyticus was examined using membrane fractions prepared from the wild type, Na+ pump-deficient mutants, and spontaneous revertant. NADH oxidase of the wild type and revertant specifically required NA+ for maximum activity, whereas Na+ was not essential for the NADH oxidase of mutants. Similar to the Na+ pump in whole cells, the Na+-dependent NADH oxidase in membranes had a pH optimum in the alkaline region. A respiratory inhibitor, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO), inhibited the Na+-dependent NADH oxidase but had little effect on the NA+-independent activity of mutant membranes. NADH:quinone oxidoreductase was found to be the Na+-dependent HQNO-sensitive site of the NADH oxidase. In the wild type cells, HQNO was also found to cause a strong inhibition of the Na+ pump with little effect on the overall H+ extrusion by respiration. The inhibition of the Na+ pump by HQNO was overcome by oxidized, but not reduced, N,N,N',N'-tetra-methyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD). In the presence of oxidised TMPD, the electron flow NADH to oxygen seemed to bypass the HQNO-sensitive site and energize the Na+ pump. From these results, it was concluded that the Na+ pump is coupled to the respiratory chain at the step of NADH:quinone oxidoreductase. 相似文献
2.
《FEBS letters》1986,202(2):327-330
The sodium-transport respiratory chain NADH:quinone reductase of a marine bacterium, Vibrio alginolyti-cus, is composed of three protein subunits, α,β and γ. The β-subunit contains FAD as a prosthetic group and corresponds to NADH dehydrogenase, which catalyses the reduction of ubiquinone to ubisemiquinone. In addition to β, subunits α. and γ are essential for the quinone reductase, which catalyses the reduction of ubiquinone to ubiquinol. The α-subunit contains FMN and the reaction catalysed by subunit α is related to the coupling site of the sodium pump in the quinone reductase. 相似文献
3.
Casutt MS Nedielkov R Wendelspiess S Vossler S Gerken U Murai M Miyoshi H Möller HM Steuber J 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2011,286(46):40075-40082
Na(+) is the second major coupling ion at membranes after protons, and many pathogenic bacteria use the sodium-motive force to their advantage. A prominent example is Vibrio cholerae, which relies on the Na(+)-pumping NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) as the first complex in its respiratory chain. The Na(+)-NQR is a multisubunit, membrane-embedded NADH dehydrogenase that oxidizes NADH and reduces quinone to quinol. Existing models describing redox-driven Na(+) translocation by the Na(+)-NQR are based on the assumption that the pump contains four flavins and one FeS cluster. Here we show that the large, peripheral NqrA subunit of the Na(+)-NQR binds one molecule of ubiquinone-8. Investigations of the dynamic interaction of NqrA with quinones by surface plasmon resonance and saturation transfer difference NMR reveal a high affinity, which is determined by the methoxy groups at the C-2 and C-3 positions of the quinone headgroup. Using photoactivatable quinone derivatives, it is demonstrated that ubiquinone-8 bound to NqrA occupies a functional site. A novel scheme of electron transfer in Na(+)-NQR is proposed that is initiated by NADH oxidation on subunit NqrF and leads to quinol formation on subunit NqrA. 相似文献
4.
Julia Steuber Michèle Rufibach Günter Fritz Frank Neese Peter Dimroth 《European journal of biochemistry》2002,269(4):1287-1292
The Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio alginolyticus was inactivated by reactive oxygen species. Highest Na+-NQR activity was observed in anaerobically prepared membranes that exhibited 1:1 coupling of NADH oxidation and Q reduction activities (1.6 U x mg(-1)). Optical and EPR spectroscopy documented the presence of b-type cytochromes, a [2Fe-2S] cluster and an organic radical signal in anaerobically prepared membranes from V. alginolyticus. It is shown that the [2Fe-2S] cluster previously assigned to the Na+-NQR originates from the succinate dehydrogenase or the related enzyme fumarate reductase. 相似文献
5.
The Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio harveyi was purified and studied by EPR and visible spectroscopy. Two EPR signals in the NADH-reduced enzyme were detected: one, a radical signal, and the other a line around g = 1.94, which is typical for a [2Fe-2S] cluster. An E(m) of -267 mV was found for the Fe-S cluster (n = 1), independent of sodium concentration. The spin concentration of the radical in the enzyme was approximately the same under a variety of redox conditions. The time course of Na+-NQR reduction by NADH indicated the presence of at least two different flavin species. Reduction of the first species (most likely, a FAD near the NADH dehydrogenase site) was very rapid in both the presence and absence of sodium. Reduction of the second flavin species (presumably, covalently bound FMN) was slower and strongly dependent on sodium concentration, with an apparent activation constant for Na+ of approximately 3.4 mM. This is very similar to the Km for Na+ in the steady-state quinone reductase reaction catalyzed by this enzyme. These data led us to conclude that the sodium-dependent step within the Na+-NQR is located between the noncovalently bound FAD and the covalently bound FMN. 相似文献
6.
Türk K Puhar A Neese F Bill E Fritz G Steuber J 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2004,279(20):21349-21355
The Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase from Vibrio cholerae is a six subunit enzyme containing four flavins and a single motif for the binding of a Fe-S cluster on its NqrF subunit. This study reports the production of a soluble variant of NqrF (NqrF') and its individual flavin and Fe-S-carrying domains using V. cholerae or Escherichia coli as expression hosts. NqrF' and the flavin domain each contain 1 mol of FAD/mol of enzyme and exhibit high NADH oxidation activity (20,000 micromol min(-1) mg(-1)). EPR, visible absorption, and circular dichroism spectroscopy indicate that the Fe-S cluster in NqrF' and its Fe-S domain is related to 2Fe ferredoxins of the vertebrate-type. The addition of NADH to NqrF' results in the formation of a neutral flavosemiquinone and a partial reduction of the Fe-S cluster. The NqrF subunit harbors the active site of NADH oxidation and acts as a converter between the hydride donor NADH and subsequent one-electron reaction steps in the Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase complex. The observed electron transfer NADH --> FAD --> [2Fe-2S] in NqrF requires positioning of the FAD and the Fe-S cluster in close proximity in accordance with a structural model of the subunit. 相似文献
7.
Specific modification of a Na+ binding site in NADH:quinone oxidoreductase from Klebsiella pneumoniae with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
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The respiratory NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (complex I) (NDH-1) is a multisubunit enzyme that translocates protons (or in some cases Na+) across energy-conserving membranes from bacteria or mitochondria. We studied the reaction of the Na+-translocating complex I from the enterobacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae with N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), with the aim of identifying a subunit critical for Na+ binding. At low Na+ concentrations (0.6 mM), DCCD inhibited both quinone reduction and Na+ transport by NDH-1 concurrent with the covalent modification of a 30-kDa polypeptide. In the presence of 50 mM Na+, NDH-1 was protected from inhibition by DCCD, and the modification of the 30-kDa polypeptide with [14C]DCCD was prevented, indicating that Na+ and DCCD competed for the binding to a critical carboxyl group in NDH-1. The 30-kDa polypeptide was assigned to NuoH, the homologue of the ND1 subunit from mitochondrial complex I. It is proposed that Na+ binds to the NuoH subunit during NADH-driven Na+ transport by NDH-1. 相似文献
8.
Juárez O Nilges MJ Gillespie P Cotton J Barquera B 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(48):33162-33167
Here we present new evidence that riboflavin is present as one of four flavins in Na+-NQR. In particular, we present conclusive evidence that the source of the neutral radical is not one of the FMNs and that riboflavin is the center that gives rise to the neutral flavosemiquinone. The riboflavin is a bona fide redox cofactor and is likely to be the last redox carrier of the enzyme, from which electrons are donated to quinone. We have constructed a double mutant that lacks both covalently bound FMN cofactors (NqrB-T236Y/NqrC-T225Y) and have studied this mutant together with the two single mutants (NqrB-T236Y and NqrC-T225Y) and a mutant that lacks the noncovalently bound FAD in NqrF (NqrF-S246A). The double mutant contains riboflavin and FAD in a 0.6:1 ratio, as the only flavins in the enzyme; noncovalently bound flavins were detected. In the oxidized form, the double mutant exhibits an EPR signal consistent with a neutral flavosemiquinone radical, which is abolished on reduction of the enzyme. The same radical can be observed in the FAD deletion mutant. Furthermore, when the oxidized enzyme reacts with ubiquinol (the reduced form of the usual electron acceptor) in a process that reverses the physiological direction of the electron flow, a single kinetic phase is observed. The kinetic difference spectrum of this process is consistent with one-electron reduction of a neutral flavosemiquinone. The presence of riboflavin in the role of a redox cofactor is thus far unique to Na+-NQR. 相似文献
9.
Bogachev AV Bertsova YV Ruuge EK Wikström M Verkhovsky MI 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2002,1556(2-3):113-120
Two radical signals with different line widths are seen in the Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio harveyi by EPR spectroscopy. The first radical is observed in the oxidized enzyme, and is assigned as a neutral flavosemiquinone. The second radical is observed in the reduced enzyme and is assigned to be the anionic form of flavosemiquinone. The time course of Na+-NQR reduction by NADH, as monitored by stopped-flow optical spectroscopy, shows three distinct phases, the spectra of which suggest that they correspond to the reduction of three different flavin species. The first phase is fast both in the presence and absence of sodium, and is assigned to reduction of FAD to FADH2 at the NADH dehydrogenating site. The rates of the other two phases are strongly dependent on sodium concentration, and these phases are attributed to reduction of two covalently bound FMN's. Combination of the optical and EPR data suggests that a neutral FMN flavosemiquinone preexists in the oxidized enzyme, and that it is reduced to the fully reduced flavin by NADH. The other FMN moiety is initially oxidized, and is reduced to the anionic flavosemiquinone. One-electron transitions of two discrete flavin species are thus assigned as sodium-dependent steps in the catalytic cycle of Na+-NQR. 相似文献
10.
Relaxation characteristics of the 23Na nuclei magnetization were used to determine the sodium-binding properties of the Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase from Vibrio harveyi (NQR). The dissociation constant of Na+ for the oxidized enzyme was found to be 24 mM and for the reduced enzyme about 30 microM. Such large (3 orders in magnitude) redox dependence of the NQR affinity to sodium ions shows that the molecular machinery was designed to use the drop in redox energy for creating an electrochemical sodium gradient. Redox titration of NQR monitored by changes in line width of the 23Na NMR signal at 2 mM Na+ showed that the enzyme affinity to sodium ions follows the Nernst law for a one-electron carrier with Em about -300 mV (vs SHE). The data indicate that energy conservation by NQR involves a mechanism modulating ion affinity by the redox state of an enzyme redox cofactor. 相似文献
11.
The Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio cholerae is a membrane-bound, respiratory Na+ pump. Its NqrF subunit contains one FAD and a [2Fe–2S] cluster and catalyzes the initial oxidation of NADH. A soluble variant of NqrF lacking its hydrophobic, N-terminal helix (NqrF′) was produced in V. cholerae wild type and nqr deletion strain. Under identical conditions of growth and induction, the yield of NqrF′ increased by 30% in the presence of the Na+-NQR. FAD-containing NqrF′ species with or without the FeS cluster were observed, indicating that assembly of the FeS center, but not insertion of the flavin cofactor, was limited during overproduction in V. cholerae. A comparison of these distinct NqrF′ species with regard to specific NADH dehydrogenase activity, pH dependence of activity and thermal inactivation showed that NqrF′ lacking the [2Fe–2S] cluster was less stable, partially unfolded, and therefore prone to proteolytic degradation in V. cholerae. We conclude that the overall yield of NqrF′ critically depends on the amount of fully assembled, FeS-containing NqrF′ in the V. cholerae host cells. The Na+-NQR is proposed to increase the stability of NqrF′ by stimulating the maturation of FeS centers. 相似文献
12.
Barquera B Hellwig P Zhou W Morgan JE Häse CC Gosink KK Nilges M Bruesehoff PJ Roth A Lancaster CR Gennis RB 《Biochemistry》2002,41(11):3781-3789
The nqr operon from Vibrio cholerae, encoding the entire six-subunit, membrane-associated, Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR), was cloned under the regulation of the P(BAD) promoter. The enzyme was successfully expressed in V. cholerae. To facilitate molecular genetics studies of this sodium-pumping enzyme, a host strain of V. cholerae was constructed in which the genomic copy of the nqr operon was deleted. By using a vector containing a six-histidine tag on the carboxy terminus of the NqrF subunit, the last subunit in the operon, the recombinant enzyme was readily purified by affinity chromatography in a highly active form from detergent-solubilized membranes of V. cholerae. The recombinant enzyme has a high specific activity in the presence of sodium. NADH consumption was assessed at a turnover number of 720 electrons per second. When purified using dodecyl maltoside (DM), the isolated enzyme contains approximately one bound ubiquinone, whereas if the detergent LDAO is used instead, the quinone content of the isolated enzyme is negligible. Furthermore, the recombinant enzyme, purified with DM, has a relatively low rate of reaction with O(2) (10-20 s(-1)). In steady state turnover, the isolated, recombinant enzyme exhibits up to 5-fold stimulation by sodium and functions as a primary sodium pump, as reported previously for Na(+)()-NQR from other bacterial sources. When reconstituted into liposomes, the recombinant Na(+)-NQR generates a sodium gradient and a Delta Psi across the membrane. SDS-PAGE resolves all six subunits, two of which, NqrB and NqrC, contain covalently bound flavin. A redox titration of the enzyme, monitored by UV-visible spectroscopy, reveals three n = 2 redox centers and one n = 1 redox center, for which the presence of three flavins and a 2Fe-2S center can account. The V. cholerae Na(+)-NQR is well-suited for structural studies and for the use of molecular genetics techniques in addressing the mechanism by which NADH oxidation is coupled to the pumping of Na(+) across the membrane. 相似文献
13.
The respiratory chain of a marine Vibrio alginolyticus contains two types of NADH-quinone reductase (NQR): one is an Na(+)-dependent NQR functioning as an Na+ pump (NQR-1) and the other is an Na(+)-independent NQR (NQR-2). NQR-2 was purified about 55-fold from the membrane of mutant Nap-1 which is devoid of NQR-1, and its properties were compared with those of NQR-1. In contrast to NQR-1, the purified NQR-2 does not require any salts for activity and is not inhibited by up to 0.4 M salts. The optimum pH of NQR-2 is between 6.8 and 7.8, which is about 0.7 ph units lower than that of NQR-1. NQR-2 is insensitive to strong inhibitors of NQR-1 such as p-chloromercuribenzoate, Ag+ and 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. Using inverted membrane vesicles, it was confirmed that NQR-2 has no capacity to generate a membrane potential. NQR-2 reduces menadione and ubiquinone-1 by a two-electron reduction pathway. Since the NADH-reacting FAD-containing beta-subunit of NQR-1 reduces quinones by a one-electron reduction pathway, the mode of quinone reduction is closely related to energy coupling; the formation of semiquinone radicals as an intermediate is likely to be essential to functioning as an ion pump. 相似文献
14.
The Na+-dependent respiratory chain NADH: quinone oxidoreductase of the marine bacterium, Vibrio alginolyticus, was extracted from membrane by a detergent, Liponox DCH, and was purified by chromatography on QAE-Sephadex and Bio-Gel HTP. The activity of NADH oxidation was separated into two fractions. The one fraction could react with several artificial electron acceptors including Q-1, but could not reduce ubiquinone and menaquinone such as Q-5 and menaquinone-4, which was called NADH dehydrogenase. The other fraction could reduce Q-5 and menaquinone-4 in addition to the NADH dehydrogenase activity, which was called quinone reductase. The purified NADH dehydrogenase consumed NADH in excess of the amount of Q-1 and the reduced Q-1 (quinol) was not produced at all due to an oxidation-reduction cycle of semiquinone radicals. The quinone reductase, however, consumed NADH with the quantitative formation of quinol on account of a dismutation reaction of semiquinone radicals. Identical to the membrane-bound NADH: quinone oxidoreductase, the quinone reductase specifically required Na+ for the activity and was inhibited by 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. The electron transfer in the quinone reductase was formulated in a form of quinone cycle and the dismutation reaction of semiquinone radicals was assigned to be coupled to the Na+ pump in the respiratory chain of this organism. 相似文献
15.
H Tokuda M Asano Y Shimamura T Unemoto S Sugiyama Y Imae 《Journal of biochemistry》1988,103(4):650-655
Bioenergetic characteristics of Na+ pump-defective mutants of a marine bacterium Vibrio alginolyticus were compared with those of the wild type and revertant. Generation of membrane potential and motility at pH 8.5 in the mutants were completely inhibited by a proton conductor, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, whereas those in the wild type or revertant were resistant to the inhibitor. Motility and amino acid transport were driven by the electrochemical potential of Na+ not only in the wild type or revertant but also in the mutants. In the absence of the proton conductor, motility and amino acid transport of the mutants did not significantly differ from those of the wild type or revertant even at pH 8.5, where the Na+ pump has maximum activity. Therefore, the electrochemical potential of Na+ in the mutants seemed to be maintained at a normal level by a respiration-dependent H+ pump and Na+/H+ antiporter. On the other hand, growth of the mutants became defective as the medium pH increased, especially on minimal medium. These results indicate that the Na+ pump is an important energy-generating mechanism when nutrients are limited at alkaline pH. 相似文献
16.
Membrane topology mapping of the Na+-pumping NADH: quinone oxidoreductase from Vibrio cholerae by PhoA-green fluorescent protein fusion analysis
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The membrane topologies of the six subunits of Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio cholerae were determined by a combination of topology prediction algorithms and the construction of C-terminal fusions. Fusion expression vectors contained either bacterial alkaline phosphatase (phoA) or green fluorescent protein (gfp) genes as reporters of periplasmic and cytoplasmic localization, respectively. A majority of the topology prediction algorithms did not predict any transmembrane helices for NqrA. A lack of PhoA activity when fused to the C terminus of NqrA and the observed fluorescence of the green fluorescent protein C-terminal fusion confirm that this subunit is localized to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Analysis of four PhoA fusions for NqrB indicates that this subunit has nine transmembrane helices and that residue T236, the binding site for flavin mononucleotide (FMN), resides in the cytoplasm. Three fusions confirm that the topology of NqrC consists of two transmembrane helices with the FMN binding site at residue T225 on the cytoplasmic side. Fusion analysis of NqrD and NqrE showed almost mirror image topologies, each consisting of six transmembrane helices; the results for NqrD and NqrE are consistent with the topologies of Escherichia coli homologs YdgQ and YdgL, respectively. The NADH, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and Fe-S center binding sites of NqrF were localized to the cytoplasm. The determination of the topologies of the subunits of Na+-NQR provides valuable insights into the location of cofactors and identifies targets for mutagenesis to characterize this enzyme in more detail. The finding that all the redox cofactors are localized to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane is discussed. 相似文献
17.
The Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) is a component of the respiratory chain of various bacteria. This enzyme is an analogous but not homologous counterpart of mitochondrial Complex I. Na+-NQR drives the same chemistry and also uses released energy to translocate ions across the membrane, but it pumps Na+ instead of H+. Most likely the mechanism of sodium pumping is quite different from that of proton pumping (for example, it could not accommodate the Grotthuss mechanism of ion movement); this is why the enzyme structure, subunits and prosthetic groups are completely special. This review summarizes modern knowledge on the structural and catalytic properties of bacterial Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductases. The sequence of electron transfer through the enzyme cofactors and thermodynamic properties of those cofactors is discussed. The resolution of the intermediates of the catalytic cycle and localization of sodium-dependent steps are combined in a possible molecular mechanism of sodium transfer by the enzyme. 相似文献
18.
Following on from our previous discovery of Na+ pumping by the NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) of Klebsiella pneumoniae, we show here that complex I from Escherichia coli is a Na+ pump as well. Our study object was the Escherichia coli mutant EP432, which lacks the Na+/H+ antiporter genes nhaA and nhaB and is therefore unable to grow on LB medium at elevated Na+ concentrations. During growth on mineral medium, the Na+ tolerance of E. coli EP432 was influenced by the organic substrate. NaCl up to 450 mM did not affect growth on glycerol and fumarate, but growth on glucose was inhibited. Correlated to the Na+ tolerance was an increased synthesis of complex I in the glycerol/fumarate medium. Inverted membrane vesicles catalysed respiratory Na+ uptake with NADH as electron donor. The sodium ion transport activity of vesicles from glycerol/fumarate-grown cells was 40 nmol mg-1 min-1 and was resistant to the uncoupler carbonyl-cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), but was inhibited by the complex I-specific inhibitor rotenone. With an E. coli mutant deficient in complex I, the Na+ transport activity was low (1-3 nmol mg-1 min-1), and rotenone was without effect. 相似文献
19.
Juárez O Neehaul Y Turk E Chahboun N DeMicco JM Hellwig P Barquera B 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2012,287(30):25678-25685
The Na(+)-pumping NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) is the main entrance for electrons into the respiratory chain of many marine and pathogenic bacteria. The enzyme accepts electrons from NADH and donates them to ubiquinone, and the free energy released by this redox reaction is used to create an electrochemical gradient of sodium across the cell membrane. Here we report the role of glycine 140 and glycine 141 of the NqrB subunit in the functional binding of ubiquinone. Mutations at these residues altered the affinity of the enzyme for ubiquinol. Moreover, mutations in residue NqrB-G140 almost completely abolished the electron transfer to ubiquinone. Thus, NqrB-G140 and -G141 are critical for the binding and reaction of Na(+)-NQR with its electron acceptor, ubiquinone. 相似文献
20.
Blanca Barquera 《Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes》2014,46(4):289-298
The Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) is a unique Na+ pumping respiratory complex found only in prokaryotes, that plays a key role in the metabolism of marine and pathogenic bacteria, including Vibrio cholerae and other human pathogens. Na+-NQR is the main entrance for reducing equivalents into the respiratory chain of these bacteria, catalyzing the oxidation of NADH and the reduction of quinone, the free energy of this redox reaction drives the selective translocation of Na+ across the cell membrane, which energizes key cellular processes. In this review we summarize the unique properties of Na+-NQR in terms of its redox cofactor composition, electron transfer reactions and a possible mechanism of coupling and pumping. 相似文献