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1.
At the heart of the Q cycle hypothesis, the cytochrome bc1 complex (bc1) is required to separate the two electrons from a quinol molecule at the quinol oxidation site. Recent studies have brought to light an intricate mechanism for this bifurcated electron transfer. A survey of the protein data bank shows 30 entries for the structures of bc1 and the homologous b6 f complex. These structures provide considerable insights into the structural organization of mitochondrial, bacterial, and plant enzymes. Crystallographic binding studies of bc1 with either quinone reduction (QN) and/or quinol oxidation (QP) site inhibitors offer atomic details on how these compounds interact with residues at their respective sites. Most importantly, the different locations and apparent flexibility observed in crystals for the extrinsic domain of the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) subunit suggest a mechanism for electron bifurcation at the QP site. Analyses of various inhibitor-bound structures revealed two classes of QP site inhibitors: Pm inhibitors that promote ISP mobility and Pf inhibitors that favor the fixation of the ISP conformation. Those analyses also shed light on a possible process by which the ISP motion switch is controlled. The first phase reduction of ISP is shown to be comparable to the reduction of the bL heme by pre-steady state kinetic analysis, whereas the second phase reduction of ISP share similar kinetics with the reduction of the bH heme. The reduction of cyt c1 is measured much slower, indicating that the reduced ISP remains bound at the QP site until the reduced heme bL is oxidized by the heme bH and supporting the existence of a control mechanism for the ISP motion switch.  相似文献   

2.
Structure analysis of the cytochrome bc1 complex in the presence and absence of Qp quinol analog inhibitors implied that a large amplitude motion of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) is required to mediate electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c1. Studies of the functional consequences of mutagenesis of an 8-residue ISP "hinge" region in the bc1 complex showed it to be sensitive to structure perturbation, implying that optimum flexibility and length are required for the large amplitude motion. Mutagenesis-function analysis carried out on the ISP hinge region of the cytochrome b6 f complex using the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 showed the following. (i) Of three petC genes, only that in the petCA operon codes for functional ISP. (ii) The function of the complex was insensitive to changes in the hinge region that increased flexibility, decreased flexibility by substitutions of 4-6 Pro residues, shortened the hinge by a 1-residue deletion, or elongated it by insertion of 4 residues. The latter change increased sensitivity to Qp inhibitors, whereas deletion of 2 residues resulted in a loss of inhibitor sensitivity and a decrease in activity, indicating a minimum hinge length of 7 residues required for optimum binding of ISP at the Qp site. Thus, in contrast to the bc1 complex, the function of the b6 f complex was insensitive to sequence changes in the ISP hinge that altered its length or flexibility. This implies that either the barriers to motion or the amplitude of ISP motion required for function is smaller than in the bc1 complex.  相似文献   

3.
The mitochondrial bc(1) complex catalyzes the oxidation of ubiquinol and the reduction of cytochrome (cyt) c. The cyt b mutation A144F has been introduced in yeast by the biolistic method. This residue is located in the cyt b cd(1) amphipathic helix in the quinol-oxidizing (Q(O)) site. The resulting mutant was respiration-deficient and was affected in the quinol binding and electron transfer rates at the Q(O) site. An intragenic suppressor mutation was selected (A144F+F179L) that partially alleviated the defect of quinol oxidation of the original mutant A144F. The suppressor mutation F179L, located at less than 4 A from A144F, is likely to compensate directly the steric hindrance caused by phenylalanine at position 144. A second set of suppressor mutations was obtained, which also partially restored the quinol oxidation activity of the bc(1) complex. They were located about 20 A from A144F in the hinge region of the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) between residues 85 and 92. This flexible region is crucial for the movement of the ISP between cyt b and cyt c(1) during enzyme turnover. Our results suggested that the compensatory effect of the mutations in ISP was due to the repositioning of this subunit on cyt b during quinol oxidation. This genetic and biochemical study thus revealed the close interaction between the cyt b cd(1) helix in the quinol-oxidizing Q(O) site and the ISP via the flexible hinge region and that fine-tuning of the Q(O) site catalysis can be achieved by subtle changes in the linker domain of the ISP.  相似文献   

4.
Roberts AG  Bowman MK  Kramer DM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(24):7707-7716
Previously [Roberts, A. G., and Kramer, D. M. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 13407-13412], we showed that 2 equiv of the quinone analogue 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropylbenzoquinone (DBMIB) could occupy the Q(o) site of the cytochrome (cyt) b(6)f complex simultaneously. In this work, a study of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra from the oriented cyt b(6)f complex shows that the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) is in distinct orientations, depending on the stoichiometry of the inhibitor at the Q(o) site. With a single DBMIB at the Q(o) site, the ISP is oriented with the 2Fe-2S cluster toward cyt f, which is similar to the orientation of the ISP in the X-ray crystal structure of the cyt b(6)f complex from thermophilic cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus in the presence of DBMIB, as well as that of the chicken mitochondrial cyt bc(1) complex in the presence of the class II inhibitor myxothiazol, which binds in the so-called "proximal niche", near the cyt b(L) heme. These data suggest that the high-affinity DBMIB site is at the proximal niche Q(o) pocket. With >or=2 equiv of DBMIB bound, the Rieske ISP is in a position that resembles the ISP(B) position of the chicken mitochondrial cyt bc(1) complex in the presence of stigmatellin and the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cyt b(6)f complex in the presence of tridecylstigmatellin (TDS), which suggests that the low-affinity DBMIB site is at the distal niche. The close interaction of DBMIB bound at the distal niche with the ISP induced the well-known effects on the 2Fe-2S EPR spectrum and redox potential. To further test the effects of DBMIB on the ISP, the extents of cyt f oxidation after flash excitation in the presence of photosystem II inhibitor DCMU were measured as a function of DBMIB concentration in thylakoids. Addition of DBMIB concentrations at which a single binding was expected did not markedly affect the extent of cyt f oxidation, whereas higher concentrations, at which double occupancy was expected, increased the extent of cyt f oxidation to levels similar to that of cyt f oxidation in the presence of a saturating concentration of stigmatellin. Simulations of the EPR g-tensor orientations of the 2Fe-2S cluster versus the physical orientations based on single-crystal studies of the cyt bc(1) complex suggest that the soluble ISP domain of the spinach cyt b(6)f complex can rotate by at least 53 degrees, which is consistent with long-range ISP domain movement. Implications of these results are discussed in the context of the X-ray crystal structures of the chicken mitochondrial cyt bc(1) complex and the M. laminosus and C. reinhardtii cyt b(6)f complexes.  相似文献   

5.
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) has been reported to inhibit proton translocation by cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f complexes without significantly altering the rate of electron transport, a process referred to as decoupling. To understand the possible role of DCCD in inhibiting the protonogenic reactions of cytochrome bc(1) complex, we investigated the effect of DCCD modification on flash-induced electron transport and electrochromic bandshift of carotenoids in Rb. sphaeroides chromatophores. DCCD has two distinct effects on phase III of the electrochromic bandshift of carotenoids reflecting the electrogenic reactions of the bc(1) complex. At low concentrations, DCCD increases the magnitude of the electrogenic process because of a decrease in the permeability of the membrane, probably through inhibition of F(o)F(1). At higher concentrations (>150 microM), DCCD slows the development of phase III of the electrochromic shift from about 3 ms in control preparations to about 23 ms at 1.2 mM DCCD, without significantly changing the amplitude. DCCD treatment of chromatophores also slows down the kinetics of flash-induced reduction of both cytochromes b and c, from 1.5-2 ms in control preparations to 8-10 ms at 0.8 mM DCCD. Parallel slowing of the reduction of both cytochromes indicates that DCCD treatment modifies the reaction of QH(2) oxidation at the Q(o) site. Despite the similarity in the kinetics of both cytochromes, the onset of cytochrome c re-reduction is delayed 1-2 ms in comparison to cytochrome b reduction, indicating that DCCD inhibits the delivery of electrons from quinol to heme c(1). We conclude that DCCD treatment of chromatophores leads to modification of the rate of Q(o)H(2) oxidation by the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) as well as the donation of electrons from ISP to c(1), and we discuss the results in the context of the movement of ISP between the Q(o) site and cytochrome c(1).  相似文献   

6.
The dimeric cytochrome bc(1) complex catalyzes the oxidation-reduction of quinol and quinone at sites located in opposite sides of the membrane in which it resides. We review the kinetics of electron transfer and inhibitor binding that reveal functional interactions between the quinol oxidation site at center P and quinone reduction site at center N in opposite monomers in conjunction with electron equilibration between the cytochrome b subunits of the dimer. A model for the mechanism of the bc(1) complex has emerged from these studies in which binding of ligands that mimic semiquinone at center N regulates half-of-the-sites reactivity at center P and binding of ligands that mimic catalytically competent binding of ubiquinol at center P regulates half-of-the-sites reactivity at center N. An additional feature of this model is that inhibition of quinol oxidation at the quinone reduction site is avoided by allowing catalysis in only one monomer at a time, which maximizes the number of redox acceptor centers available in cytochrome b for electrons coming from quinol oxidation reactions at center P and minimizes the leakage of electrons that would result in the generation of damaging oxygen radicals.  相似文献   

7.
Domain rotation of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) between the cytochrome (cyt) b and cyt c(1) redox centers plays a key role in the mechanism of the cyt bc(1) complex. Electron transfer within the cyt bc(1) complex of Paracoccus denitrificans was studied using a ruthenium dimer to rapidly photo-oxidize cyt c(1) within 1 μs and initiate the reaction. In the absence of any added quinol or inhibitor of the bc(1) complex at pH 8.0, electron transfer from reduced ISP to cyt c(1) was biphasic with rate constants of k(1f) = 6300 ± 3000 s(-1)and k(1s) = 640 ± 300 s(-1) and amplitudes of 10 ± 3% and 16 ± 4% of the total amount of cyt c(1) photooxidized. Upon addition of any of the P(m) type inhibitors MOA-stilbene, myxothiazol, or azoxystrobin to cyt bc(1) in the absence of quinol, the total amplitude increased 2-fold, consistent with a decrease in redox potential of the ISP. In addition, the relative amplitude of the fast phase increased significantly, consistent with a change in the dynamics of the ISP domain rotation. In contrast, addition of the P(f) type inhibitors JG-144 and famoxadone decreased the rate constant k(1f) by 5-10-fold and increased the amplitude over 2-fold. Addition of quinol substrate in the absence of inhibitors led to a 2-fold increase in the amplitude of the k(1f) phase. The effect of QH(2) on the kinetics of electron transfer from reduced ISP to cyt c(1) was thus similar to that of the P(m) inhibitors and very different from that of the P(f) inhibitors. The current results indicate that the species occupying the Q(o) site has a significant conformational influence on the dynamics of the ISP domain rotation.  相似文献   

8.
R P Barbagallo  G Finazzi  G Forti 《Biochemistry》1999,38(39):12814-12821
The effects of two inhibitors of electron transfer in the cytochrome b(6)f complex have been studied in whole cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. DNP-INT affected equally the two steps of the concerted oxidation of plastoquinol at the Q(o) site; it decreased the rates of both cytochrome f reduction and cytochrome b(6) turnover, without affecting the amplitude of their redox signals. On the contrary, DBMIB inhibited only the rate of cytochrome f reduction while reducing, at the same time, the amplitude of cytochrome b(6) signals. The accessibility of DNP-INT to the Q(o) site was unaffected by preillumination, while that of DBMIB was greatly enhanced, even after a single turnover of the cytochrome b(6)f complex. Similar results were obtained with a mutant strain (FUD2) where the Q(o) site has an affinity for plastoquinol that is diminished by a factor of approximately 50 [Finazzi, G., et al. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 2867-2874]. However, the binding of the two inhibitors was differentially influenced by the mutation: a factor of approximately 250 was calculated for DNP-INT and a factor of only approximately 5 for DBMIB. This suggests that they bind within the Q(o) site in two distinct pockets, which are differentially involved in the process of quinol oxidation, in agreement with a recent model where two distinct positions for the reduced and semireduced quinones are considered [Crofts, A. R., and Berry, E. A. (1998) Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 8, 501-509].  相似文献   

9.
A non-photosynthetic mutant (Ps-) of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, designated R126, was analyzed for a defect in the cyclic electron transfer system. Compared to a Ps+ strain MR126, the mutant was shown to have a full complement of electron transfer components (reaction centers, ubiquinone-10, cytochromes b, c1, and c2, the Rieske 2-iron, 2-sulfur (Rieske FeS) center, and the antimycin-sensitive semiquinone). Functionally, mutant R126 failed to catalyze complete cytochrome c1 + c2 re-reduction or cytochrome b reduction following a short (10 microseconds) flash of actinic light. Evidence (from flash-induced carotenoid band shift) was characteristic of inhibition of electron transfer proximal to cytochrome c1 of the ubiquinol-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase. Three lines of evidence indicate that the lesion of R126 disrupts electron transfer from quinol to Rieske FeS: 1) the degree of cytochrome c1 + c2 re-reduction following a flash is indicative of electron transfer from Rieske FeS to cytochrome c1 + c2 without redox equilibration with an additional electron from a quinol; 2) inhibitors that act at the Qz site and raise the Rieske FeS midpoint redox potential (Em), namely 5-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole or 3-alkyl-2-hydroxy-1,4-napthoquinone, have no effect on cytochrome c1 + c2 oxidation in R126; 3) the Rieske FeS center, although it exhibits normal redox behavior, is unable to report the redox state of the quinone pool, as metered by its EPR line shape properties. Flash-induced proton binding in R126 is indicative of normal functional primary (QA) and secondary (QB) electron acceptor activity of the photosynthetic reaction center. The Qc functional site of cytochrome bc1 is intact in R126 as measured by the existence of antimycin-sensitive, flash-induced cytochrome b reduction.  相似文献   

10.
Roberts AG  Bowman MK  Kramer DM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):4070-4079
Many current models of the Q cycle for the cytochrome (cyt) b6f and the cyt bc1 complexes incorporate 'Rieske' iron-sulfur protein (ISP) domain movements to gate electron transfer and to ensure high yields of proton shuttling. It was previously proposed that copper ions, which bind at a site distant from the quinol oxidase (Q(o)) site, inhibit plastoquinol (PQH2) binding by restraining the hydrophilic head domain of the ISP [Rao B. K., S., Tyryshkin, A. M., Roberts, A. G., Bowman, M. K., and Kramer, D. M. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3285-3296]. The present work presents evidence that this is indeed the case for both copper ions and Zn2+, which appear to inhibit by similar mechanisms. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra show that Cu2+ and Zn2+ binding to the cyt b6f complex displaces the Q(o) site inhibitor 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropylbenzoquinone (DBMIB). At high concentrations, both DBMIB and Cu2+ or Zn2+ can bind simultaneously, altering the Rieske 2Fe2S cluster and Cu2+ EPR spectra, suggesting perturbations in their respective binding sites. Both Zn2+ and Cu1+ altered the orientations of the Rieske 2Fe2S cluster with respect to the membrane plane, but had no effect on that of the cyt b6 hemes. Cu2+ was found to change the orientation of the cyt f heme plane, consistent with binding on the cyt f protein. Within conservative constraints, the data suggest that the ISP is shifted into a position intermediate between the ISP(C) position, when the Q(o) site is unoccupied, and the ISP(B) position, when the Q(o) site is occupied by inhibitors such as DBMIB or stigmatellin. These results support the role of ISP domain movements in Q(o) site catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Yu CA  Cen X  Ma HW  Yin Y  Yu L  Esser L  Xia D 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2008,1777(7-8):1038-1043
Intensive biochemical, biophysical and structural studies of the cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex in the past have led to the formulation of the "protonmotive Q-cycle" mechanism for electron and proton transfer in this vitally important complex. The key step of this mechanism is the separation of electrons during the oxidation of a substrate quinol at the Q(P) site with both electrons transferred simultaneously to ISP and cyt b(L) when the extrinsic domain of ISP (ISP-ED) is located at the b-position. Pre-steady state fast kinetic analysis of bc(1) demonstrates that the reduced ISP-ED moves to the c(1)-position to reduce cyt c(1) only after the reduced cyt b(L) is oxidized by cyt b(H). However, the question of how the conformational switch of ISP-ED is initiated remains unanswered. The results obtained from analysis of inhibitory efficacy and binding affinity of two types of Q(P) site inhibitors, Pm and Pf, under various redox states of the bc(1) complex, suggest that the electron transfer from heme b(L) to b(H) is the driving force for the releasing of the reduced ISP-ED from the b-position to c(1)-position to reduce cyt c(1).  相似文献   

12.
Famoxadone (FAM) is a newly commercialized antibiotic for use against plant pathogenic fungi. It inhibits mitochondria ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (EC 1.10.2.2, bc(1) complex) function by binding to the proximal niche of the quinol oxidation site on the enzyme. FAM has effects on the enzyme characteristic of both type Ia (E-beta-methoxyacrylates) and type Ic (stigmatellin) inhibitors. Steady-state and tight-binding inhibition kinetics; as well as direct binding measurements with famoxadone (FAM) and methoxyacrylate stilbene (MOAS), indicated that FAM is a non-competitive inhibitor of the enzyme while methoxyacrylate stilbene (MOAS) is better described as a mixed-competitive inhibitor with respect to substrate. Mixed-competitive and non-competitive inhibition kinetics predicts a ternary enzyme-substrate-inhibitor (ESI) intermediate in the reaction sequence. Current views of the Qo domain architecture propose substrate binding niches in both distal and proximal regions of the domain. Since both inhibitors bind within the proximal niche, the formation of an ESI complex implicates substrate binding within the distal niche near the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) and cytochrome c(1) (C1). In the presence of saturating FAM, addition of substrate led to a slow, nearly stoichiometric reduction of C1 that was enzyme dependent, and independent of O(2)(-) production. Similar experiments with saturating MOAS led to a slow, sub-stoichiometric reduction of C1 by substrate. A comparison of the stoichiometries of reduction, and the apparent second order rate constants (K(cat)/K(m)) indicated that saturating MOAS elicits two distinct enzyme-inhibitor (EI) intermediates. One form does not bind substrate, but the other does. In contrast, saturating FAM leads to a predominant EI form capable of binding substrate. We suggest that these differences can be correlated to the respective effects of each inhibitor on the position of the ISP, and the integrity of a distal substrate binding site. The results also indicate that binding of these inhibitory substrate analogues to the proximal niche of the Qo domain significantly increases the DeltaG(double dagger) for reduction of C1.  相似文献   

13.
Structural analysis of the bc(1) complex suggests that the extra membrane domain of iron-sulfur protein (ISP) undergoes substantial movement during the catalytic cycle. Binding of Qo site inhibitors to this complex affects the mobility of ISP. Taking advantage of the difference in the pH dependence of the redox midpoint potentials of cytochrome c(1) and ISP, we have measured electron transfer between the [2Fe-2S] cluster and heme c(1) in native and inhibitor-treated partially reduced cytochrome bc(1) complexes. The rate of the pH-induced cytochrome c(1) reduction can be estimated by conventional stopped-flow techniques (t1/2, 1-2 ms), whereas the rate of cytochrome c(1) oxidation is too high for stopped-flow measurement. These results suggest that oxidized ISP has a higher mobility than reduced ISP and that the movement of reduced ISP may require an energy input from another component. In the 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT)-inhibited complex, the rate of cytochrome c(1) reduction is greatly decreased to a t1/2 of approximately 2.8 s. An even lower rate is observed with the stigmatellin-treated complex. These results support the idea that UHDBT and stigmatellin arrest the [2Fe-2S] cluster at a fixed position, 31 A from heme c(1), making electron transfer very slow.  相似文献   

14.
The isolated cytochrome (cyt) b(6)f complex from spinach is inhibited by Cu(2+) with a K(D) of about 1 microM at pH 7.6 in the presence of 1.6 microM decyl-plastoquinol (C(10)-PQH(2)) as a substrate. Inhibition was competitive with respect to C(10)-PQH(2) but noncompetitive with respect to horse heart cyt c or plastocyanin (PC). Inhibition was also pH-sensitive, with an apparent pK at about 7, above which inhibition was stronger, suggesting that binding occurred at or near a protonatable amino acid residue. Equilibrium binding titrations revealed ca. 1.4 tight Cu(2+) binding sites with a K(D) of about 0.5 microM and multiple (>8) weak (K(D) > 50 microM) binding sites per complex. Pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques were used to identify probable binding sites for inhibitory Cu(2+). A distinct enhancement of the relaxation time constant for the EPR signal from bound Cu(2+) was observed when the cyt f was paramagnetic. The magnitude and temperature-dependence of this relaxation enhancement were consistent with a dipole interaction between Cu(2+) and the cyt f (Fe(3+)) heme at a distance of between 30 and 54 A, depending upon the relative orientations of Cu(2+) and cyt f heme g-tensors. Two-pulse electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and 4-pulse 2-dimensional hyperfine sublevel correlation (2D HYSCORE) measurements of Cu(2+) bound to isolated cyt b(6)f complex indicated the presence of a weakly coupled nitrogen nucleus. The nuclear quadrupole interaction (NQI) and the hyperfine interaction (HFI) parameters identified one Cu(2+) ligand as an imidazole nitrogen of a His residue, and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) confirmed the presence of a directly coordinated nitrogen. A model of the 3-dimensional structure of the cytochrome b(6)f complex was constructed on the basis of sequences and structural similarities with the mitochondrial cyt bc(1) complex, for which X-ray structures have been solved. This model indicated three possible His residues as ligands to inhibitory Cu(2+). Two of these are located on the "Rieske" iron-sulfur protein protein (ISP) while the third is found on the cyt f protein. None of these potential ligands appear to interact directly with the quinol oxidase (Q(o)) binding pocket. A model is thus proposed wherein Cu(2+) interferes with the interaction of the ISP protein with the Q(o) site, preventing the binding and subsequent oxidation of plastoquinonol. Implications for the involvement of ISP "domain movement" in Q(o) site catalysis are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Crystallographic structures of the mitochondrial ubiquinol/cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc(1) complex) suggest that the mechanism of quinol oxidation by the bc(1) complex involves a substantial movement of the soluble head of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) between reaction domains in cytochrome b and cytochrome c(1) subunits. In this paper we report the results of steered molecular dynamics simulations inducing, through an applied torque within 1 ns, a 56 degrees rotation of the soluble domain of ISP. For this purpose, a solvated structure of the bc(1) complex in a phospholipid bilayer (a total of 206,720 atoms) was constructed. A subset of 91,061 atoms was actually simulated with 45,131 moving atoms. Point charge distributions for the force field parametrization of heme groups and the Fe(2)S(2) cluster of the Rieske protein included in the simulated complex were determined. The simulations showed that rotation of the soluble domain of ISP is actually feasible. Several metastable conformations of the ISP during its rotation were identified and the interactions stabilizing the initial, final, and intermediate positions of the soluble head of the ISP domain were characterized. A pathway for proton conduction from the Q(o) site to the solvent via a water channel has been identified.  相似文献   

16.
Structures of mitochondrial ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc(1) complex) from several animal sources have provided a basis for understanding the functional mechanism at the molecular level. Using structures of the chicken complex with and without inhibitors, we analyze the effects of mutation on quinol oxidation at the Q(o) site of the complex. We suggest a mechanism for the reaction that incorporates two features revealed by the structures, a movement of the iron sulfur protein between two separate reaction domains on cytochrome c(1) and cytochrome b and a bifurcated volume for the Q(o) site. The volume identified by inhibitor binding as the Q(o) site has two domains in which inhibitors of different classes bind differentially; a domain proximal to heme b(L), where myxothiazole and beta-methoxyacrylate- (MOA-) type inhibitors bind (class II), and a distal domain close to the iron sulfur protein docking interface, where stigmatellin and 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiaole (UHDBT) bind (class I). Displacement of one class of inhibitor by another is accounted for by the overlap of their volumes, since the exit tunnel to the lipid phase forces the hydrophobic "tails" to occupy common space. We conclude that the site can contain only one "tailed" occupant, either an inhibitor or a quinol or one of their reaction products. The differential sensitivity of strains with mutations in the different domains is explained by the proximity of the affected residues to the binding domains of the inhibitors. New insights into mechanism are provided by analysis of mutations that affect changes in the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of the iron sulfur protein, associated with its interactions with the Q(o)-site occupant. The structures show that all interactions with the iron sulfur protein must occur at the distal position. These include interactions between quinone, or class I inhibitors, and the reduced iron sulfur protein and formation of a reaction complex between quinol and oxidized iron sulfur protein. The step with high activation energy is after formation of the reaction complex, likely in formation of the semiquinone and subsequent dissociation of the complex into products. We suggest that further progress of the reaction requires a movement of semiquinone to the proximal position, thus mapping the bifurcated reaction to the bifurcated volume. We suggest that such a movement, together with a change in conformation of the site, would remove any semiquinone formed from further interaction with the oxidized [2Fe-2S] center and also from reaction with O(2) to form superoxide anion. We also identify two separate reaction paths for exit of the two protons released in quinol oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
Energy transduction in the cytochrome bc(1) complex is achieved by catalyzing opposite oxido-reduction reactions at two different quinone binding sites. We have determined the pre-steady state kinetics of cytochrome b and c(1) reduction at varying quinol/quinone ratios in the isolated yeast bc(1) complex to investigate the mechanisms that minimize inhibition of quinol oxidation at center P by reduction of the b(H) heme through center N. The faster rate of initial cytochrome b reduction as well as its lower sensitivity to quinone concentrations with respect to cytochrome c(1) reduction indicated that the b(H) hemes equilibrated with the quinone pool through center N before significant catalysis at center P occurred. The extent of this initial cytochrome b reduction corresponded to a level of b(H) heme reduction of 33%-55% depending on the quinol/quinone ratio. The extent of initial cytochrome c(1) reduction remained constant as long as the fast electron equilibration through center N reduced no more than 50% of the b(H) hemes. Using kinetic modeling, the resilience of center P catalysis to inhibition caused by partial pre-reduction of the b(H) hemes was explained using kinetics in terms of the dimeric structure of the bc(1) complex which allows electrons to equilibrate between monomers.  相似文献   

18.
The modified Q cycle mechanism accounts for the proton and charge translocation stoichiometry of the bc(1) complex, and is now widely accepted. However the mechanism by which the requisite bifurcation of electron flow at the Q(o) site reaction is enforced is not clear. One of several proposals involves conformational gating of the docking of the Rieske ISP at the Q(o) site, controlled by the stage of the reaction cycle. Effects of different Q(o)-site inhibitors on the position of the ISP seen in crystals may reflect the same conformational mechanism, in which case understanding how different inhibitors control the position of the ISP may be a key to understanding the enforcement of bifurcation at the Q(o) site (Table?1). Here we examine the available structures of cytochrome bc(1) with different Q(o)-site inhibitors and different ISP positions to look for clues to this mechanism. The effect of ISP removal on binding affinity of the inhibitors stigmatellin and famoxadone suggest a "mutual stabilization" of inhibitor binding and ISP docking, however this thermodynamic observation sheds little light on the mechanism. The cd(1) helix of cytochrome b moves in such a way as to accommodate docking when inhibitors favoring docking are bound, but it is impossible with the current structures to say whether this movement of α-cd(1) is a cause or result of ISP docking. One component of the movement of the linker between E and F helices also correlates with the type of inhibitor and ISP position, and seems to be related to the H-bonding pattern of Y279 of cytochrome b. An H-bond from Y279 to the ISP, and its possible modulation by movement of F275 in the presence of famoxadone and related inhibitors, or its competition with an alternate H-bond to I269 of cytochrome b that may be destabilized by bound famoxadone, suggest other possible mechanisms. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Cen X  Yu L  Yu CA 《FEBS letters》2008,582(4):523-526
The key step of the "protonmotive Q-cycle" mechanism for cytochrome bc1 complex is the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol at the Qp site. ISP is reduced when its head domain is at the b-position and subsequent move to the c1 position, to reduce cytochrome c1, upon protein conformational changes caused by the electron transfer from cytochrome b(L) to b(H). Results of analyses of the inhibitory efficacy and the binding affinity, determined by isothermal titration calorimetry, of Pm and Pf, on different redox states of cytochrome bc1 complexes, confirm this speculation. Pm inhibitor has a higher affinity and better efficacy with the cytochrome b(H) reduced complex and Pf binds better and has a higher efficacy with the ISP reduced complex.  相似文献   

20.
At least two features of the crystal structures of the cytochrome b6f complex from the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Mastigocladus laminosus and a green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, have implications for the pathways and mechanism of charge (electron/proton) transfer in the complex: (i) The narrow 11 x 12 A portal between the p-side of the quinone exchange cavity and p-side plastoquinone/quinol binding niche, through which all Q/QH2 must pass, is smaller in the b6f than in the bc1 complex because of its partial occlusion by the phytyl chain of the one bound chlorophyll a molecule in the b6f complex. Thus, the pathway for trans-membrane passage of the lipophilic quinone is even more labyrinthine in the b6f than in the bc1 complex. (ii) A unique covalently bound heme, heme cn, in close proximity to the n-side b heme, is present in the b6f complex. The b6f structure implies that a Q cycle mechanism must be modified to include heme cn as an intermediate between heme bn and plastoquinone bound at a different site than in the bc1 complex. In addition, it is likely that the heme bn-cn couple participates in photosytem I-linked cyclic electron transport that requires ferredoxin and the ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase. This pathway through the n-side of the b6f complex could overlap with the n-side of the Q cycle pathway. Thus, either regulation is required at the level of the redox state of the hemes that would allow them to be shared by the two pathways, and/or the two different pathways are segregated in the membrane.  相似文献   

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