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1.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from bovine heart mitochondria is a complicated, multi-subunit, membrane-bound assembly. Recently, the subunit compositions of complex I and three of its subcomplexes have been reevaluated comprehensively. The subunits were fractionated by three independent methods, each based on a different property of the subunits. Forty-six different subunits, with a combined molecular mass of 980 kDa, were identified. The three subcomplexes, Iα, Iβ and Iλ, correlate with parts of the membrane extrinsic and membrane-bound domains of the complex. Therefore, the partitioning of subunits amongst these subcomplexes has provided information about their arrangement within the L-shaped structure. The sequences of 45 subunits of complex I have been determined. Seven of them are encoded by mitochondrial DNA, and 38 are products of the nuclear genome, imported into the mitochondrion from the cytoplasm. Post-translational modifications of many of the nuclear encoded subunits of complex I have been identified. The seven mitochondrially encoded subunits, and seven of the nuclear encoded subunits, are homologues of the 14 subunits found in prokaryotic complexes I. They are considered to be sufficient for energy transduction by complex I, and they are known as the core subunits. The core subunits bind a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) at the active site for NADH oxidation, up to eight iron-sulfur clusters, and one or more ubiquinone molecules. The locations of some of the cofactors can be inferred from the sequences of the core subunits. The remaining 31 subunits of bovine complex I are the supernumerary subunits, which may be important either for the stability of the complex, or for its assembly. Sequence relationships suggest that some of them carry out reactions unrelated to the NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity of the complex.  相似文献   

2.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from bovine heart mitochondria is a complicated, multi-subunit, membrane-bound assembly. Recently, the subunit compositions of complex I and three of its subcomplexes have been reevaluated comprehensively. The subunits were fractionated by three independent methods, each based on a different property of the subunits. Forty-six different subunits, with a combined molecular mass of 980 kDa, were identified. The three subcomplexes, I alpha, I beta and I lambda, correlate with parts of the membrane extrinsic and membrane-bound domains of the complex. Therefore, the partitioning of subunits amongst these subcomplexes has provided information about their arrangement within the L-shaped structure. The sequences of 45 subunits of complex I have been determined. Seven of them are encoded by mitochondrial DNA, and 38 are products of the nuclear genome, imported into the mitochondrion from the cytoplasm. Post-translational modifications of many of the nuclear encoded subunits of complex I have been identified. The seven mitochondrially encoded subunits, and seven of the nuclear encoded subunits, are homologues of the 14 subunits found in prokaryotic complexes I. They are considered to be sufficient for energy transduction by complex I, and they are known as the core subunits. The core subunits bind a flavin mononucleotide (FMN) at the active site for NADH oxidation, up to eight iron-sulfur clusters, and one or more ubiquinone molecules. The locations of some of the cofactors can be inferred from the sequences of the core subunits. The remaining 31 subunits of bovine complex I are the supernumerary subunits, which may be important either for the stability of the complex, or for its assembly. Sequence relationships suggest that some of them carry out reactions unrelated to the NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity of the complex.  相似文献   

3.
The phosphoproteome of bovine heart complex I of the respiratory chain has been analysed with a procedure based on nondenaturing gel electrophoretic separation of complex I from small quantities of mitochondria samples, in-gel digestion, in combination with phosphopeptide enrichment by titanium dioxide and MS. The results, complemented by analyses of purified samples of complex I, showed phosphorylation of five subunits of the complex, 42 kDa (human gene NDUFA10), ESSS, B14.5a (human gene NDUFA7), B14.5b (human gene NDUFC2) and B16.6 (GRIM-19). MS also revealed the presence of phosphorylated programmed cell death protein 8(AIF) in native and purified samples of complex I analysed. The possible physiological relevance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Bovine complex I is an assembly of 46 different proteins. Seven of them are encoded in mitochondrial DNA, and the rest are nuclear gene products that are imported into the organelle. Fourteen of the nuclear encoded subunits have modified N termini. Many of these post-translational modifications have been deduced previously from intact protein masses. These assignments have been verified by mass spectrometric analysis of peptides. Thirteen of them are N-alpha-acetylated, and a 14th, subunit B18, is N-alpha-myristoylated. Subunit B18 forms part of the membrane arm of the complex, and the myristoyl group may attach subunit B18 to the membrane. One subunit, B12, has a particularly complex pattern of post-translational modification that has not been analyzed before. It is a mixture of the N-alpha-acetylated form and the form with a free N terminus. In addition, it has one, two, or three methyl groups attached to histidine residues at positions 4, 6, and 8 in various combinations. The predominant form is methylated on residues 4 and 6. There is no evidence for the methylation of histidine 2. Subunit B12 is also part of the membrane arm of complex I, and it probably spans the membrane once, but as its orientation is not known, the methylation sites could be in either the matrix or the intermembrane space. These experiments represent another significant step toward establishing the precise chemical composition of mammalian complex I.  相似文献   

5.
Polypeptides of beef heart mitochondrial complex I were isolated from 15 mg of solubilized beef heart mitochondria using antibodies immobilized on an agarose chromatography column. The preparation was examined by SDS electrophoresis and Western blotting using affinity-purified antibodies to complex I and compared to beef heart complex I purified according to the conventional method of Hatefi and Rieske. There was a high degree of homology between the two preparations as judged by SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis and by immunoblotting with seven affinity-purified antibodies to various complex I subunits. This method could be applied to the preparation of complex I subunits from small samples such as human muscle biopsy specimens.  相似文献   

6.
Complex I purified from bovine heart mitochondria is a multisubunit membrane-bound assembly. In the past, seven of its subunits were shown to be products of the mitochondrial genome, and 35 nuclear encoded subunits were identified. The complex is L-shaped with one arm in the plane of the membrane and the other lying orthogonal to it in the mitochondrial matrix. With mildly chaotropic detergents, the intact complex has been resolved into various subcomplexes. Subcomplex Ilambda represents the extrinsic arm, subcomplex Ialpha consists of subcomplex Ilambda plus part of the membrane arm, and subcomplex Ibeta is another substantial part of the membrane arm. The intact complex and these three subcomplexes have been subjected to extensive reanalysis. Their subunits have been separated by three independent methods (one-dimensional SDS-PAGE, two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/SDS-PAGE, and reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC)) and analyzed by tryptic peptide mass fingerprinting and tandem mass spectrometry. The masses of many of the intact subunits have also been measured by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and have provided valuable information about post-translational modifications. The presence of the known 35 nuclear encoded subunits in complex I has been confirmed, and four additional nuclear encoded subunits have been detected. Subunits B16.6, B14.7, and ESSS were discovered in the SDS-PAGE analysis of subcomplex Ilambda, in the two-dimensional gel analysis of the intact complex, and in the HPLC analysis of subcomplex Ibeta, respectively. Despite many attempts, no sequence information has been obtained yet on a fourth new subunit (mass 10,566+/-2 Da) also detected in the HPLC analysis of subcomplex Ibeta. It is unlikely that any more subunits of the bovine complex remain undiscovered. Therefore, the intact enzyme is a complex of 46 subunits, and, assuming there is one copy of each subunit in the complex, its mass is 980 kDa.  相似文献   

7.
A study is presented of the cAMP-dependent phosphorylation in bovine heart mitochondria of three proteins of 42, 16 and 6.5 kDa associated to the inner membrane. These proteins are also phosphorylated by the cytosolic cAMP-dependent protein kinase and by the purified catalytic subunit of this enzyme. In the cytosol, proteins of 16 and 6.5 kDa are phosphorylated by the cAMP-dependent kinase. It is possible that cytosolic and mitochondrial cAMP-dependent kinases phosphorylate the same proteins in the two compartments.  相似文献   

8.
Direct photoaffinity labeling of purified bovine heart NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) with 32P-labeled NAD(H), NADP(H) and ADP has shown that five polypeptides become labeled, with molecular masses of 51, 42, 39, 30, and 18-20 kDa. The 51 and the 30-kDa polypeptides were labeled with either [32P]NAD(H), [32P]NADP(H) or [beta-32P]ADP. The 42-kDa polypeptide was labeled with [32P]NAD(H) and to a small extent with [beta-32P]ADP. It was not labeled with [32P]NADP(H). The 39-kDa polypeptide was labeled with [32P]NADPH and to a small extent with [beta-32P]ADP. Our previous studies had shown that this subunit also binds NADP, but not NAD(H) [Yamaguchi, M., Belogrudov, G.I. & Hatefi, Y. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 8094-8098]. The 18-20-kDa polypeptide was labeled only with [32P]NADPH. Among these polypeptides, the 51-kDa subunit is known to contain FMN and a [4Fe-4S] cluster, and is the NAD(P)H-binding subunit of the primary dehydrogenase domain of complex I. The possible roles of the other nucleotide-binding subunits of complex I have been discussed.  相似文献   

9.
An oligomycin-sensitive F1F0-ATPase isolated from bovine heart mitochondria has been reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles and pumps protons. this preparation of F1F0-ATPase contains 14 different polypeptides that are resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, and so it is more complex than bacterial and chloroplast enzymes, which have eight or nine different subunits. The 14 bovine subunits have been characterized by protein sequence analysis. They have been fractionated on polyacrylamide gels and transferred to poly(vinylidene difluoride) membranes, and N-terminal sequences have been determined in nine of them. By comparison with known sequences, eight of these have been identified as subunits beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon, which together with the alpha subunit form the F1 domain, as the b and c (or DCCD-reactive) subunits, both components of the membrane sector of the enzyme, and as the oligomycin sensitivity conferral protein (OSCP) and factor 6 (F6), both of which are required for attachment of F1 to the membrane sector. The sequence of the ninth, named subunit e, has been determined and is not related to any reported protein sequence. The N-terminal sequence of a tenth subunit, the membrane component A6L, could be determined after a mild acid treatment to remove an alpha-N-formyl group. Similar experiments with another membrane component, the a or ATPase-6 subunit, caused the protein to degrade, but the protein has been isolated from the enzyme complex and its position on gels has been unambiguously assigned. No N-terminal sequence could be derived from three other proteins. The largest of these is the alpha subunit, which previously has been shown to have pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid at the N terminus of the majority of its chains. The other two have been isolated from the enzyme complex; one of them is the membrane-associated protein, subunit d, which has an alpha-N-acetyl group, and the second, surprisingly, is the ATPase inhibitor protein. When it is isolated directly from mitochondrial membranes, the inhibitor protein has a frayed N terminus, with chains starting at residues 1, 2, and 3, but when it is isolated from the purified enzyme complex, its chains are not frayed and the N terminus is modified. Previously, the sequences at the N terminals of the alpha, beta, and delta subunits isolated from F1-ATPase had been shown to be frayed also, but in the F1F0 complex they each have unique N-terminal sequences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Association of ferrochelatase with Complex I in bovine heart mitochondria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The location of ferrochelatase in bovine heart mitochondria has been studied. When the mitochondria were fractionated into Complexes I, II and III, ferrochelatase activity was only found in Complex I. Complex I also showed heme synthesis from ferric ion in the presence of NADH as an electron donor. Immunoblot experiments confirmed the presence of ferrochelatase in Complex I, but not in Complexes II or III. Some phospholipids, including phosphatidylserine and cardiolipin, stimulated NADH-dependent heme synthesis from ferric ion. When purified ferrochelatase was incubated with the low molecular weight form of NADH dehydrogenase prepared from Complex I, heme synthesis from ferric ion occurred by the addition of NADH. FMN markedly elevated the synthesis. These results indicate that ferrous ion is produced by NADH oxidation in Complex I and is then utilized for heme synthesis by ferrochelatase.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The interaction of the protein subunits of the bc1 complex from beef heart is analysed on the basis of protein chemical data and of secondary structure predictions suggesting a large number of amphipathic helices. Electrostatic interactions, i.e. helix-dipole interactions and ionic bonds, may play a major role in the stabilisation of the arrangement of the subunits within the multi-protein complex, formation of subcomplexes and maintenance of the steric strain of cytochrome b. A model of the heme-carrying 'core' of cytochrome b, i.e. of helices II-V, is presented consisting of a twisted '4-alpha-helical' bundle held together by helix-dipole interactions and stabilised by the interaction with other protein subunits of the bc1 complex.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Isolation of histone-like proteins from mitochondria of bovine heart   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Two methods for isolating and purifying histone-like proteins from mitochondria of bovine heart are described. In the first, a sonicated extract of the mitochondria was fractionated in three chromatography steps, including affinity chromatography on DNA-cellulose, to purify a protein that resembles very closely the histone-like protein (HM) of yeast mitochondria. In the second method, an acid extract of the heart mitochondria was the starting material; two other histone-like proteins were separated. Thus, as in mitochondria of Xenopus laevis, several histone-like proteins are present in mitochondria of bovine heart.  相似文献   

15.
1. In isolated bovine heart mitochondria, the 14C-labelled dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) induced inhibition of the ATPase activity is accompanied by labelling of three polypeptides of Mx 9000, 16 000 and 33 000. Of these, only the 9000 polypeptide reacts with [14C]DCCD proportionally to the inhibitory effect, being saturated when the enzyme is maximally inhibited. 2. The 9000 and 16 000 polypeptides are extracted by neutral chloroform/methanol (2 : 1 v/v) while the 33 000 polypeptide remains in the non-extractable residue. No disaggregation of the polypeptides takes place during the extraction. 3. In the ATPase complex immunoprecipitated with antibody against F1, the 9000 and 16 000 polypeptides are present, but the 33 000 polypeptide is absent. 4. The results obtained indicate that the 33 000 polypeptide is not a component of the ATPase complex. As far as F0 is concerned, two types of the binding sites for DCCD were demonstrated, corresponding to the 9000 and 16 000 polypeptides. Their existence is explained by a non-random arrangement among individual monomers of the DCCD-binding protein.  相似文献   

16.
Mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from bovine heart is a complicated multisubunit, membrane-bound assembly. Seven subunits are encoded by mitochondrial DNA, and the sequences of 36 nuclear encoded subunits have been described. The subunits of complex I and two subcomplexes (Ialpha and Ibeta) were resolved on one- and two-dimensional gels and by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed two previously unknown subunits in complex I, named B14.7 and ESSS, one in each subcomplex. Coding sequences for each protein were identified in data bases and were confirmed by cDNA cloning and sequencing. Subunit B14.7 has an acetylated N terminus, no presequence, and contains four potential transmembrane helices. It is homologous to subunit 21.3b from complex I in Neurospora crassa and is related to Tim17, Tim22, and Tim23, which are involved in protein translocation across the inner membrane. Subunit ESSS has a cleaved mitochondrial import sequence and one potential transmembrane helix. A total of 45 different subunits of bovine complex I have now been characterized.  相似文献   

17.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from bovine heart mitochondria is a highly complicated, energy transducing, membrane-bound enzyme. It contains 46 different subunits and nine redox cofactors: a noncovalently bound flavin mononucleotide and eight iron-sulfur clusters. The mechanism of complex I is not known. Mechanistic studies using the bovine enzyme, a model for human complex I, have been precluded by the difficulty of preparing complex I which is pure, monodisperse, and fully catalytically active. Here, we describe and characterize a preparation of bovine complex I which fulfills all of these criteria. The catalytic activity is strongly dependent on the phospholipid content of the preparation, and three classes of phospholipid interactions with complex I have been identified. First, complex I contains tightly bound cardiolipin. Cardiolipin may be required for the structural integrity of the complex or play a functional role. Second, the catalytic activity is determined by the amounts of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) which are bound to the complex. They are more weakly bound than cardiolipin, exchange with PC and PE in solution, and can substitute for one another. However, their nontransitory loss leads to irreversible functional impairment. Third, phospholipids are also required in the assay buffer for the purified enzyme to exhibit its full activity. It is likely that they are required for solubilization and presentation of the hydrophobic ubiquinone substrate.  相似文献   

18.
The effect and the binding of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) to a soluble native F1-ATPase-inhibitor protein complex (F1-IP) isolated from heart mitochondria was studied. About one mol DCCD bound per mol F1-IP complex; this inhibited its ATPase activity by more than 95%, ever under conditions that led to maximal hydrolysis. Bound DCCD localized to beta-subunits of the F1-IP complex. Cross-linking of the DCCD labeled complex with N-(ethoxy-carbonyl)-2-ethoxydihydroquinoline yielded a protein with a Mr 65,000-67,000 that contained IP as evidenced by its reaction with IP antibodies. No alpha-subunits were detected in this cross-linked product. The Mr 65,000-67,000 protein corresponds to beta-subunits cross-linked with IP (Klein et al, Biochemistry 1980; 19, 2919-2925). However, no DCCD was found in the cross-linked beta-subunit-IP product of labeled native F1-IP. Thus the beta-subunit in contact with IP is distinct from the other two beta-subunits of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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