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1.
In many cytochrome c oxidases glutamic acid 242 is required for proton transfer to the binuclear heme a3/CuB site, and for proton pumping. When present, the side chain of Glu-242 is orientated “down” towards the proton-transferring D-pathway in all available crystal structures. A nonpolar cavity “above” Glu-242 is empty in these structures. Yet, proton transfer from Glu-242 to the binuclear site, and for proton-pumping, is well established, and the cavity has been proposed to at least transiently contain water molecules that would mediate proton transfer. Such proton transfer has been proposed to require isomerisation of the Glu-242 side chain into an “up” position pointing towards the cavity. Here, we have explored the molecular dynamics of the protonated Glu-242 side chain. We find that the “up” position is preferred energetically when the cavity contains four water molecules, but the “down” position is favoured with less water. We conclude that the cavity might be deficient in water in the crystal structures, possibly reflecting the “resting” state of the enzyme, and that the “up/down” equilibrium of Glu-242 may be coupled to the presence of active-site water molecules produced by O2 reduction.  相似文献   

2.
Yu Liu 《BBA》2007,1767(1):45-55
Formamide is a slow-onset inhibitor of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase that is proposed to act by blocking water movement through the protein. In the presence of formamide the redox level of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase evolves over the steady state as the apparent electron transfer rate from cytochrome a to cytochrome a3 slows. At maximal inhibition cytochrome a and cytochrome c are fully reduced, whereas cytochrome a3 and CuB remain fully oxidized consistent with the idea that formamide interferes with electron transfer between cytochrome a and the oxygen reaction site. However, transient kinetic studies show that intrinsic rates of electron transfer are unchanged in the formamide-inhibited enzyme. Formamide inhibition is demonstrated for another member of the heme-oxidase family, cytochrome c oxidase from Bacillus subtilis, but the onset of inhibition is much quicker than for mitochondrial oxidase. If formamide inhibition arises from a steric blockade of water exchange during catalysis then water exchange in the smaller bacterial oxidase is more open. Subunit III removal from the mitochondrial oxidase hastens the onset of formamide inhibition suggesting a role for subunit III in controlling water exchange during the cytochrome c oxidase reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome c oxidase is essential for aerobic life as a membrane-bound energy transducer. O2 reduction at the haem a3-CuB centre consumes electrons transferred via haem a from cytochrome c outside the membrane. Protons are taken up from the inside, both to form water and to be pumped across the membrane (M.K.F. Wikström, Nature 266 (1977) 271 [1]; M. Wikström, K. Krab, M. Saraste, Cytochrome Oxidase, A Synthesis, Academic Press, London, 1981 [2]). The resulting electrochemical proton gradient drives ATP synthesis (P. Mitchell, Chemiosmotic Coupling in Oxidative and Photosynthetic Phosphorylation, Glynn Research, Bodmin, UK, 1966 [3]). Here we present a molecular mechanism for proton pumping coupled to oxygen reduction that is based on the unique properties of water in hydrophobic cavities. An array of water molecules conducts protons from a conserved glutamic acid, either to the Δ-propionate of haem a3 (pumping), or to haem a3-CuB (water formation). Switching between these pathways is controlled by the redox-state-dependent electric field between haem a and haem a3-CuB, which determines the water-dipole orientation, and therefore the proton transfer direction. Proton transfer via the propionate provides a gate to O2 reduction. This pumping mechanism explains the unique arrangement of the metal cofactors in the structure. It is consistent with the large body of biochemical data, and is shown to be plausible by molecular dynamics simulations.  相似文献   

4.
The redox-driven proton pump cytochrome c oxidase is that enzymatic machinery of the respiratory chain that transfers electrons from cytochrome c to molecular oxygen and thereby splits molecular oxygen to form water. To investigate the reaction mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase on the single vibrational level, we used time-resolved step-scan Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and studied the dynamics of the reduced enzyme after photodissociation of bound carbon monoxide across the midinfrared range (2300-950 cm−1). Difference spectra of the bovine complex were obtained at -20°C with 5 μs time resolution. The data demonstrate a dynamic link between the transient binding of CO to CuB and changes in hydrogen bonding at the functionally important residue E(I-286). Variation of the pH revealed that the pKa of E(I-286) is >9.3 in the fully reduced CO-bound oxidase. Difference spectra of cytochrome c oxidase from beef heart are compared with those of the oxidase isolated from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The bacterial enzyme does not show the environmental change in the vicinity of E(I-286) upon CO dissociation. The characteristic band shape appears, however, in redox-induced difference spectra of the bacterial enzyme but is absent in redox-induced difference spectra of mammalian enzyme. In conclusion, it is demonstrated that the dynamics of a large protein complex such as cytochrome c oxidase can be resolved on the single vibrational level with microsecond Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The applied methodology provides the basis for future investigations of the physiological reaction steps of this important enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
R. Boelens  R. Wever  B.F. Van Gelder 《BBA》1982,682(2):264-272
The light-induced difference spectra of the fully reduced (a3+a2+3-CO) complex and the mixed-valence carboxycytochrome c oxidase (a3+a2+3-CO) during steady-state illumination and after flash photolysis showed marked differences. The differences appear to be due to electron transfer between the redox centres in the enzyme. The product of the absorbance coefficient and the quantum yield was found to be equal in both enzyme species, both when determined from the rates of photolysis and from the values of the dissociation constants of the cytochrome a2+3-CO complex. This would confirm that the spectral properties of cytochrome a3 are not affected by the redox state of cytochrome a and CuA. When the absorbance changes after photolysis of cytochrome a2+3-CO with a laser flash were followed on a time scale from 1 μs to 1 s in the fully reduced carboxycytochrome c oxidase, only the CO recombination reaction was observed. However, in the mixed-valence enzyme an additional fast absorbance change (k = 7·103s?1) was detected. The kinetic difference spectrum of this fast change showed a peak at 415 nm and a trough at 445 nm, corresponding to oxidation of cytochrome a3. Concomitantly, a decrease of the 830 nm band was observed due to reduction of CuA. This demonstrates that in the partially reduced enzyme a pathway is present between CuA and the cytochrome a3-CuB pair, via which electrons are transferred rapidly.  相似文献   

6.
In the presence of the uncoupler, external zinc ions inhibit rapidly turnover of cytochrome c oxidase reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles or bound to the membrane of intact mitochondria. The effect is promoted by electron leaks into the oxidase during preincubation with Zn2+. Inhibition of liposome-bound bovine cytochrome oxidase by external Zn2+ titrates with a Ki of 1 ± 0.3 μM. Presumably, the Zn2+-binding group at the positively charged side is not reactive in the oxidized enzyme, but becomes accessible to the cation in some partially reduced state(s) of the oxidase; reduction of CuB is tentatively proposed to be responsible for the effect.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Cytochrome oxidase: pathways for electron tunneling and proton transfer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
 Electrons from cytochrome c, the substrate of cytochrome oxidase, a redox-linked proton pump, are accepted by CuA in subunit II. From there they are transferred to the proton pumping machinery in subunit I, cytochrome a and cytochrome a 3–CuB. The reduction of the latter site, which is the dioxygen reducing unit, is coupled to proton uptake. Dioxygen reduction involves a peroxide and a ferryl ion intermediate, and it is the transition between these and back to the resting oxidized enzyme that are coupled to proton pumping. The X-ray structures suggest electron–transfer pathways that can account for the observed rates provided that the reorganization energies are small. They also reveal two proton-transfer pathways, and mutagenesis experiments have shown that one is used for proton uptake during the initial reduction of cytochrome a 3–CuB, whereas the other mediates transfer of the pumped protons. Received: 23 March 1998 / Accepted: 11 May 1998  相似文献   

9.
The fundamental chemistry underpinning aerobic life on Earth involves reduction of dioxygen to water with concomitant proton translocation. This process is catalyzed by members of the heme-copper oxidase (HCO) superfamily. Despite the availability of crystal structures for all types of HCO, the mode of action for this enzyme is not understood at the atomic level, namely how vectorial H+ and e- transport are coupled. Toward addressing this problem, we report wild type and A120F mutant structures of the ba3-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus at 1.8 Å resolution. The enzyme has been crystallized from the lipidic cubic phase, which mimics the biological membrane environment. The structures reveal 20 ordered lipid molecules that occupy binding sites on the protein surface or mediate crystal packing interfaces. The interior of the protein encloses 53 water molecules, including 3 trapped in the designated K-path of proton transfer and 8 in a cluster seen also in A-type enzymes that likely functions in egress of product water and proton translocation. The hydrophobic O2-uptake channel, connecting the active site to the lipid bilayer, contains a single water molecule nearest the CuB atom but otherwise exhibits no residual electron density. The active site contains strong electron density for a pair of bonded atoms bridging the heme Fea3 and CuB atoms that is best modeled as peroxide. The structure of ba3-oxidase reveals new information about the positioning of the enzyme within the membrane and the nature of its interactions with lipid molecules. The atomic resolution details provide insight into the mechanisms of electron transfer, oxygen diffusion into the active site, reduction of oxygen to water, and pumping of protons across the membrane. The development of a robust system for production of ba3-oxidase crystals diffracting to high resolution, together with an established expression system for generating mutants, opens the door for systematic structure-function studies.  相似文献   

10.
In reoxidation experiments with cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) in the presence of both reducing substrate and molecular oxygen, a new EPR signal from Cu2+ has been observed. The new signal corresponds to 0.45 Cu per functional unit. It is concluded that the new EPR signal originates from Cu2+B, the copper which is EPR-nondetectable in the resting enzyme.Optical absorption changes in the 500–700 nm region accompanies the decay of the new Cu2+ EPR signal.Based on the results in this investigation a catalytic cycle for cytochrome oxidase is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Ryogo Sugitani 《BBA》2009,1787(9):1140-6960
We have examined the network of connected internal cavities in cytochrome c oxidase along which water produced at the catalytic center is removed from the enzyme. Using combination of structural analysis, molecular dynamics simulations, and free energy calculations we have identified two exit pathways that connect the Mg2+ ion cavity to the outside of the enzyme. Each pathway has a well-defined bottleneck, which determines the overall rate of water traffic along the exit pathway, and a specific cooperative mechanism of passing it. One of the pathways is going via Arg438/439 (in bovine numbering) toward the CuA center, approaching closely its His204B ligand and Lys171B residue; and the other is going toward Asp364 and Thr294. Comparison of the pathways among different aa3-type enzymes shows that they are well conserved. Possible connections of the finding to redox-coupled proton pumping mechanism are discussed. We propose specific mutations near the bottlenecks of the exit pathways that can test some of our hypotheses.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) reduces O2 to water in a bimetallic site including Fea3 and CuB giving intermediate molecules, termed A-, P-, F-, O-, E-, and R-forms. From the P-form on, each reaction step is driven by single-electron donations from cytochrome c coupled with the pumping of a single proton through the H-pathway, a proton-conducting pathway composed of a hydrogen-bond network and a water channel. The proton-gradient formed is utilized for ATP production by F-ATPase. For elucidation of the proton pumping mechanism, crystal structural determination of these intermediate forms is necessary. Here we report X-ray crystallographic analysis at ∼1.8 Å resolution of fully reduced CcO crystals treated with O2 for three different time periods. Our disentanglement of intermediate forms from crystals that were composed of multiple forms determined that these three crystallographic data sets contained ∼45% of the O-form structure, ∼45% of the E-form structure, and ∼20% of an oxymyoglobin-type structure consistent with the A-form, respectively. The O- and E-forms exhibit an unusually long CuB2+-OH distance and CuB1+-H2O structure keeping Fea33+-OH state, respectively, suggesting that the O- and E-forms have high electron affinities that cause the O→E and E→R transitions to be essentially irreversible and thus enable tightly coupled proton pumping. The water channel of the H-pathway is closed in the O- and E-forms and partially open in the R-form. These structures, together with those of the recently reported P- and F-forms, indicate that closure of the H-pathway water channel avoids back-leaking of protons for facilitating the effective proton pumping.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of Zn2+ on the rates of electron transfer and of voltage generation in the cytochrome bc1 complex (bc1) was investigated under excitation of Rhodobacter capsulatus chromatophores with flashing light. When added, Zn2+ retarded the oxidation of cytochrome b and allowed to monitor (at 561-570 nm) the reduction of its high potential heme bh (in the absence of Zn2+ this reaction was masked by the fast re-oxidation of the heme). The effect was accompanied by the deceleration of both the cytochrome c1 reduction (as monitored at 552-570 nm) and the generation of transmembrane voltage (monitored by electrochromism at 522 nm). At Zn2+ <100 μM the reduction of heme bh remained 10 times faster than other reactions. The kinetic discrepancy was observed even after an attenuated flash, when bc1 turned over only once. These observations (1) raise doubt on the notion that the transmembrane electron transfer towards heme bh is the main electrogenic reaction in the cytochrome bc1 complex, (2) imply an allosteric link between the site of heme bh oxidation and the site of cytochrome c1 reduction at the opposite side of the membrane, and (3) indicate that the internal redistribution of protons might account for the voltage generation by the cytochrome bc1 complex.  相似文献   

14.
We re-determined the near infrared (NIR) spectral signatures (650–980 nm) of the different cytochrome c oxidase redox centres, in the process separating them into their component species. We confirm that the primary contributor to the oxidase NIR spectrum between 700 and 980 nm is cupric CuA, which in the beef heart enzyme has a maximum at 835 nm. The 655 nm band characterises the fully oxidised haem a3/CuB binuclear centre; it is bleached either when one or more electrons are added to the binuclear centre or when the latter is modified by ligands. The resulting ‘perturbed’ binuclear centre is also characterised by a previously unreported broad 715–920 nm band. The NIR spectra of certain stable liganded species (formate and CO), and the unstable oxygen reaction compounds P and F, are similar, suggesting that the latter may resemble the stable species electronically. Oxidoreduction of haem a makes no contribution either to the 835 nm maximum or the 715 nm band. Our results confirm the ability of NIRS to monitor the CuA centre of cytochrome oxidase activity in vivo, although noting some difficulties in precise quantitative interpretations in the presence of perturbations of the haem a3/CuB binuclear centre.  相似文献   

15.
《BBA》2006,1757(9-10):1133-1143
In cytochrome c oxidase, oxido-reductions of heme a/CuA and heme a3/CuB are cooperatively linked to proton transfer at acid/base groups in the enzyme. H+/e cooperative linkage at Fea3/CuB is envisaged to be involved in proton pump mechanisms confined to the binuclear center. Models have also been proposed which involve a role in proton pumping of cooperative H+/e linkage at heme a (and CuA). Observations will be presented on: (i) proton consumption in the reduction of molecular oxygen to H2O in soluble bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase; (ii) proton release/uptake associated with anaerobic oxidation/reduction of heme a/CuA and heme a3/CuB in the soluble oxidase; (iii) H+ release in the external phase (i.e. H+ pumping) associated with the oxidative (R  O transition), reductive (O  R transition) and a full catalytic cycle (R  O  R transition) of membrane-reconstituted cytochrome c oxidase. A model is presented in which cooperative H+/e linkage at heme a/CuA and heme a3/CuB with acid/base clusters, C1 and C2 respectively, and protonmotive steps of the reduction of O2 to water are involved in proton pumping.  相似文献   

16.
Thirteen different polypeptide subunits, each in one copy, five phosphatidyl ethanolamines and three phosphatidyl glycerols, two hemes A, three Cu ions, one Mg ion, and one Zn ion are detectable in the crystal structure of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase in the fully oxidized form at 2.8 Å resolution. A propionate of hems a, a peptide unit (–CO–NH–), and an imidazole bound to CuA are hydrogen-bonded sequentially, giving a facile electron transfer path from CuA to heme a. The O2 binding and reduction site, heme a 3, is 4.7 Å apart from CuB. Two possible proton transfer paths from the matrix side to the cytosolic side are located in subunit I, including hydrogen bonds and internal cavities likely to contain randomly oriented water molecules. Neither path includes the O2 reduction site. The O2 reduction site has a proton transfer path from the matrix side possibly for protons for producing water. The coordination geometry of CuB and the location of Tyr244 in subunit I at the end of the scalar proton path suggests a hydroperoxo species as the two electron reduced intermediate in the O2 reduction process.  相似文献   

17.
The proton pumping mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase on a molecular level is highly disputed. Recently theoretical calculations and real time electron transfer measurements indicated the involvement of residues in the vicinity of the ring A propionate of heme a3, including Asp399 and the CuB ligands His 325, 326. In this study we probed the interaction of Asp399 with the binuclear center and characterize the protonation state of its side chain. Redox induced FTIR difference spectra of mutations at the site in direct comparison to wild type, indicate that below pH 5 Asp 399 displays signals typical for the deprotonation of the acidic residue with reduction of the enzyme. Interestingly at a pH higher than 5, no contributions from Asp 399 are evident. In order to probe the interaction of the site with the binuclear center we followed the rebinding of CO by infrared spectroscopy for mutations on residue Asp399 to Glu, Asn and Leu. Previously different CO conformers have been identified for bacterial cytochrome c oxidases, and its pH dependent behaviour discussed to be relevant for catalysis. Interestingly we observe the lack of this pH dependency and a strong influence on the observable conformers for all mutants studied here, clearly suggesting a communication of the site with the heme-copper center and the nearby histidine residues.  相似文献   

18.
Rapid-scan Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy was used to investigate the electron transfer reaction QAQB→QAQB (kAB(1)) in mutant reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, where Asp-L210 and/or Asp-M17 have been replaced with Asn. Mutation of both residues decreases drastically kAB(1), attributed to slow proton transfer to Glu-L212, which becomes rate limiting for electron transfer to QB [M.L. Paddock et al., Biochemistry 40 (2001) 6893]. In the double mutant, the FTIR difference spectrum recorded during the time window 4-29 ms following a flash showed peaks at 1670 (−), 1601 (−) and 1467 (+) cm−1, characteristic of QA reduction. The time evolution of the spectra shows reoxidation of QA and concomitant reduction of QB with a kinetics of about 40 ms. In native reaction centers and in both single mutants, formation of QB occurs much faster than in the double mutant. Within the time resolution of the technique, protonation of Glu-L212, as characterized by an absorption increase at 1728 cm−1 [E. Nabedryk et al., Biochemistry 34 (1995) 14722], was found to proceed with the same kinetics as reduction of QB in all samples. These rapid-scan FTIR results support the model of proton uptake being rate limiting for the first electron transfer from QA to QB and the identification of Glu-L212 as the main proton acceptor in the state QAQB.  相似文献   

19.
Cytochrome b559 is an essential component of the photosystem II reaction center in photosynthetic oxygen-evolving organisms, but its function still remains unclear. The use of photosystem II preparations from Thermosynechococcus elongatus of high integrity and activity allowed us to measure for the first time the influence of cytochrome b559 mutations on its midpoint redox potential and on the reduction of the cytochrome b559 by the plastoquinone pool (or QB). In this work, five mutants having a mutation in the α-subunit (I14A, I14S, R18S, I27A and I27T) and one in the β-subunit (F32Y) of cytochrome b559 have been investigated. All the mutations led to a destabilization of the high potential form of the cytochrome b559. The midpoint redox potential of the high potential form was significantly altered in the αR18S and αI27T mutant strains. The αR18S strain also showed a high sensitivity to photoinhibitory illumination and an altered oxidase activity. This was suggested by measurements of light induced oxidation and dark re-reduction of the cytochrome b559 showing that under conditions of a non-functional water oxidation system, once the cytochrome is oxidized by P680+, the yield of its reduction by QB or the PQ pool was smaller and the kinetic slower in the αR18S mutant than in the wild-type strain. Thus, the extremely positive redox potential of the high potential form of cytochrome b559 could be necessary to ensure efficient oxidation of the PQ pool and to function as an electron reservoir replacing the water oxidation system when it is not operating.  相似文献   

20.
X-ray structural and mutational analyses have shown that bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) pumps protons electrostatically through a hydrogen bond network using net positive charges created upon oxidation of a heme iron (located near the hydrogen bond network) for O2 reduction. Pumping protons are transferred by mobile water molecules from the negative side of the mitochondrial inner membrane through a water channel into the hydrogen bond network. For blockage of spontaneous proton back-leak, the water channel is closed upon O2 binding to the second heme (heme a3) after complete collection of the pumping protons in the hydrogen bond network. For elucidation of the structural bases for the mechanism of the proton collection and timely closure of the water channel, conformational dynamics after photolysis of CO (an O2 analog)-bound CcO was examined using a newly developed time-resolved infrared system feasible for accurate detection of a single C=O stretch band of α-helices of CcO in H2O medium. The present results indicate that migration of CO from heme a3 to CuB in the O2 reduction site induces an intermediate state in which a bulge conformation at Ser-382 in a transmembrane helix is eliminated to open the water channel. The structural changes suggest that, using a conformational relay system, including CuB, O2, heme a3, and two helix turns extending to Ser-382, CuB induces the conformational changes of the water channel that stimulate the proton collection, and senses complete proton loading into the hydrogen bond network to trigger the timely channel closure by O2 transfer from CuB to heme a3.  相似文献   

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