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1.
The cytochrome o complex of the Escherichia coli aerobic respiratory chain is a ubiquinol oxidase. The enzyme consists of at least four subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis and contains two heme b prosthetic groups (b555 and b562) plus copper. The sequence of the cyo operon, encoding the subunits of the oxidase, reveals five open reading frames, cyoABCDE. This paper describes results obtained by expressing independently cyoA and cyoB in the absence of the other subunits of the complex. Polyclonal antibodies which react with subunits I and II of the purified oxidase demonstrate that cyoA and cyoB correspond to subunit II and subunit I, respectively, of the complex. These subunits are stably inserted into the membrane when expressed. Furthermore, expression of cyoB (subunit I) results in elevated heme levels in the membrane. Reduced-minus-oxidized spectra suggest that the cytochrome b555 component is present but that the cytochrome b562 component is not. This heme component is shown to bind to CO, as it does in the intact enzyme. Hence, subunit I alone is sufficient for the assembly of the stable CO-binding heme component of this oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
We have cloned and sequenced COX12, the nuclear gene for subunit VIb of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytochrome c oxidase. This subunit, which was previously not found in cytochrome c oxidase purified from S. cerevisiae, has a deduced amino acid sequence which is 41% identical to the sequences of subunits VIb of bovine and human cytochrome c oxidases. The chromosomal copy of COX12 was replaced with a plasmid-derived copy of COX12, in which the coding region for the suspected cytochrome oxidase subunit was replaced with the yeast URA3 gene. The resulting Ura+ deletion strain grew poorly at room temperature and was unable to grow at 37 degrees C on ethanol/glycerol medium, whereas growth was normal at both temperatures on dextrose. This temperature-dependent, petite phenotype of the deletion strain was complemented to wild-type growth with a single copy plasmid carrying COX12. Cytochrome c oxidase activity in mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain is decreased to 5-15% of that in membranes from the wild-type parent, and this activity is restored to normal when the cox12 deletion strain is complemented by the plasmid-borne COX12. Optical spectra of mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain revealed that optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase is assembled at room temperature and at 37 degrees C, although the heme a + a3 absorption is diminished approximately 50%. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by COX12 is identical to the N-terminal sequence of a subunit found in yeast cytochrome c oxidase purified by a new procedure (Taanman, J.-W., and Capaldi, R. A. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 22481-22485). We conclude that COX12 encodes a subunit of yeast cytochrome c oxidase which is essential during assembly for full cytochrome c oxidase activity but apparently can be removed after the oxidase is assembled, with retention of oxidase activity. This is the first instance in which deletion of a subunit of cytochrome c oxidase results in assembly of optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase but having markedly diminished activity.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome c oxidase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is composed of nine subunits. Subunits I, II and III are products of mitochondrial genes, while subunits IV, V, VI, VII, VIIa and VIII are products of nuclear genes. To investigate the role of cytochrome c oxidase subunit VII in biogenesis or functioning of the active enzyme complex, a null mutation in the COX7 gene, which encodes subunit VII, was generated, and the resulting cox7 mutant strain was characterized. The strain lacked cytochrome c oxidase activity and haem a/a3 spectra. The strain also lacked subunit VII, which should not be synthesized owing to the nature of the cox7 mutation generated in this strain. The amounts of remaining cytochrome c oxidase subunits in the cox7 mutant were examined. Accumulation of subunit I, which is the product of the mitochondrial COX1 gene, was found to be decreased relative to other mitochondrial translation products. Results of pulse-chase analysis of mitochondrial translation products are consistent with either a decreased rate of translation of COX1 mRNA or a very rapid rate of degradation of nascent subunit I. The synthesis, stability or mitochondrial localization of the remaining nuclear-encoded cytochrome c oxidase subunits were not substantially affected by the absence of subunit VII. To investigate whether assembly of any of the remaining cytochrome c oxidase subunits is impaired in the mutant strain, the association of the mitochondrial-encoded subunits I, II and III with the nuclear-encoded subunit IV was investigated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
W Dowhan  C R Bibus    G Schatz 《The EMBO journal》1985,4(1):179-184
Yeast cytochrome c oxidase contains three large subunits made in mitochondria and at least six smaller subunits made in the cytoplasm. There is evidence that the catalytic centers (heme a and copper) are associated with the mitochondrially-made subunits, but the role of the cytoplasmically-made subunits has remained open. Using a gene interruption technique, we have now constructed a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant which lacks the largest of the cytoplasmically-made subunits (subunit IV). This mutant is devoid of cyanide-sensitive respiration, the absorption spectrum of cytochrome aa3 and cytochrome c oxidase activity. It still contains the other cytochrome c oxidase subunits but these are not assembled into a stable complex. Active cytochrome c oxidase was restored to the mutant by introducing a plasmid-borne wild-type subunit IV gene; no restoration was seen with a gene carrying an internal deletion corresponding to amino acid residues 28-66 of the mature subunit. Subunit IV is thus necessary for proper assembly of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

5.
The assembly of cytochrome c oxidase subunits I-III was studied in vitro in isolated rat liver mitochondria pre-labeled with [35S]methionine. Individual subunits were immunoabsorbed with monospecific antibodies. Isolated heme a from rat liver mitochondria, when added to radiolabeled mitochondria, induced assembly of subunit I with subunits II and III. Assembly of these subunits was not observed in mitochondria incubated in the presence of heme b(hemin) or in the absence of heme. Quantitative analysis of immunoabsorbed, radiolabeled subunits suggests that the predominant effect of heme a is on the assembly of subunit I with subunit III.  相似文献   

6.
Genetic manipulation of the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides was used to determine the minimal structural subunit associations required for the assembly of the heme A and copper centers of subunit I. In the absence of the genes for subunits II and III, expression of the gene for subunit I in Rb. sphaeroides allowed purification of a form of free subunit I (subunit I(a)()) that contained a single heme A. No copper was present in this protein, indicating that the heme a(3)-Cu(B) active site was not assembled. In cells expressing the genes for subunits I and II, but not subunit III, two oxidase forms were synthesized that were copurified by histidine affinity chromatography and separated by anion-exchange chromatography. One form was a highly active subunit I-II oxidase containing a full complement of structurally normal metal centers. This shows that association of subunit II with subunit I is required for stable formation of the active site in subunit I. In contrast, subunit III is not required for the formation of any of the metal centers or for the production of an oxidase with wild-type activity. The second product of the cells lacking subunit III was a large amount of a free form of subunit I that appeared identical to subunit I(a)(). Since significant amounts of subunit I(a)() were also isolated from wild-type cells, it is likely that subunit I(a)() will be present in any preparation of the aa(3)-type oxidase isolated via an affinity tag on subunit I.  相似文献   

7.
The cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex is a component of the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. This enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of ubiquinol-8 within the cytoplasmic membrane and the reduction of molecular oxygen to water along with the concomitant generation of a proton-motive force across the membrane. Previous studies have established that the oxidase is composed of one copy of each of two subunits (I and II), and contains four heme prosthetic groups. The hydropathy profiles of the amino acid sequences suggest that each subunit has multiple transmembrane-spanning helical segments. The goal of the current work is to obtain experimental information about which portions of the two polypeptide chains are facing the cytoplasm. This is part of an effort to determine the topological folding of the two subunits across the membrane. A number of random gene fusions were generated in vitro which encode hybrid proteins in which the amino-terminal portion is provided by one of the two subunits of the oxidase, and the carboxyl-terminal portion is beta-galactosidase. Studies from other systems have indicated that the only hybrid proteins which will manifest high beta-galactosidase specific activity and be membrane-bound will be those where the fusion junction is in a region of the cytochrome polypeptides facing the cytoplasm. Fusions were obtained in eight positions within subunit I and 11 positions within subunit II. These identified four cytoplasmic-facing regions within subunit II, consistent with its hydropathy profile showing eight transmembrane helices. The data with subunit I are less conclusive.  相似文献   

8.
The cbb(3) cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of four nonidentical subunits. Three subunits (CcoN, CcoO, and CcoP) comprise the catalytic "core" complex required for the reduction of O(2) and the oxidation of a c-type cytochrome. On the other hand, the functional role of subunit IV (CcoQ) of the cbb(3) oxidase was not obvious, although we previously suggested that it is involved in the signal transduction pathway controlling photosynthesis gene expression (Oh, J. I., and Kaplan, S. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 2688-2696). Here we go on to demonstrate that subunit IV protects the core complex, in the presence of O(2), from proteolytic degradation by a serine metalloprotease. In the absence of CcoQ, we suggest that the presence of O(2) leads to the loss of heme from the core complex, which destabilizes the cbb(3) oxidase into a "degradable" form, perhaps by altering its conformation. Under aerobic conditions the absence of CcoQ appears to affect the CcoP subunit most severely. It was further demonstrated, using a series of COOH-terminal deletion derivatives of CcoQ, that the minimum length of CcoQ required for stabilization of the core complex under aerobic conditions is the amino-terminal approximately 48-50 amino acids.  相似文献   

9.
The synthesis of cytochrome oxidase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was recently shown to require a protein encoded by the nuclear gene COX10. This protein was found to be homologous to the putative protein product of the open reading frame ORF1 reported in one of the cytochrome oxidase operons of Paracoccus denitrificans. In the present study we demonstrate the existence in yeast of a second nuclear gene, COX11, whose encoded protein is homologous to another open reading frame (ORF3) present in the same operon of P. denitrificans. Mutations in COX11 elicit a deficiency in cytochrome oxidase. In this and in other respects cox11 and cox10 mutants have very similar phenotypes. An antibody has been obtained against the yeast COX11 protein. The antibody recognizes a 28 kd protein in yeast mitochondria, consistent with the size of the protein predicted from the sequence of COX11. The COX11 protein is tightly associated with the mitochondrial membrane but is not a component of purified cytochrome oxidase. An analysis of cytochrome oxidase subunits in wild type and in a cox11 mutant suggests that the COX11 protein is not required either for synthesis or transport of the subunit polypeptides into mitochondria. It seems more probable that COX11 protein exerts its effect at some terminal stage of enzyme synthesis, perhaps in directing assembly of the subunits.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Assembly of the core subunits of the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase in mitochondria and aerobic bacteria such as Rhodobacter sphaeroides requires the association of three subunits and the formation of five to seven metal centers. Several assembly proteins are required for the late stages of oxidase assembly in eukaryotes; some of these are also present in Rb. sphaeroides. To investigate the role of one of these proteins, Cox11p, the mitochondrial-like oxidase of Rb. sphaeroides was overexpressed and purified from cells that lacked cox11, the gene for Cox11p. The oxidase that assembled in the absence of Cox11p lacked Cu(B) at the active site and contained greatly reduced amounts of metal at the magnesium/manganese-binding site between subunits I and II. This inactive oxidase, however, did contain hemes a and a(3), Cu(A), and all three subunits. These results indicate that Cox11p is required at a late, perhaps final, step in the assembly of cytochrome oxidase, most likely the insertion of Cu(B). Oxidase which assembled in a strain with a low copy number of cox11 appeared nearly wild type, suggesting that Cox11p is required in substoichiometric amounts for its role in oxidase assembly.  相似文献   

12.
The mitochondrial genomes of Chlamydomonad algae lack the cox2 gene that encodes the essential subunit COX II of cytochrome c oxidase. COX II is normally a single polypeptide encoded by a single mitochondrial gene. In this work we cloned two nuclear genes encoding COX II from both Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Polytomella sp. The cox2a gene encodes a protein, COX IIA, corresponding to the N-terminal portion of subunit II of cytochrome c oxidase, and the cox2b gene encodes COX IIB, corresponding to the C-terminal region. The cox2a and cox2b genes are located in the nucleus and are independently transcribed into mRNAs that are translated into separate polypeptides. These two proteins assemble with other cytochrome c oxidase subunits in the inner mitochondrial membrane to form the mature multi-subunit complex. We propose that during the evolution of the Chlorophyte algae, the cox2 gene was divided into two mitochondrial genes that were subsequently transferred to the nucleus. This event was evolutionarily distinct from the transfer of an intact cox2 gene to the nucleus in some members the Leguminosae plant family.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Biogenesis of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) relies on a large number of assembly proteins, one of them being Surf1. In humans, the loss of Surf1 function is associated with Leigh syndrome, a fatal neurodegenerative disorder. In the soil bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans, homologous genes specifying Surf1 have been identified and located in two operons of terminal oxidases: surf1q is the last gene of the qox operon (coding for a ba(3)-type ubiquinol oxidase), and surf1c is found at the end of the cta operon (encoding subunits of the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase). We introduced chromosomal single and double deletions for both surf1 genes, leading to significantly reduced oxidase activities in membrane. Our experiments on P. denitrificans surf1 single deletion strains show that both Surf1c and Surf1q are functional and act independently for the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase and the ba(3)-type quinol oxidase, respectively. This is the first direct experimental evidence for the involvement of a Surf1 protein in the assembly of a quinol oxidase. Analyzing the heme content of purified cytochrome c oxidase, we conclude that Surf1, though not indispensable for oxidase assembly, is involved in an early step of cofactor insertion into subunit I.  相似文献   

15.
The yeast nuclear gene ATP4, encoding the ATP synthase subunit 4, was disrupted by insertion into the middle of it the selective marker URA3. Transformation of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain D273-10B/A/U produced a mutant unable to grow on glycerol medium. The ATP4 gene is unique since subunit 4 was not present in mutant mitochondria; the hypothetical truncated subunit 4 was never detected. ATPase was rendered oligomycin-insensitive and the F1 sector of this mutant appeared loosely bound to the membrane. Analysis of mitochondrially translated hydrophobic subunits of F0 revealed that subunits 8 and 9 were present, unlike subunit 6. This indicated a structural relationship between subunits 4 and 6 during biogenesis of F0. It therefore appears that subunit 4 (also called subunit b in beef heart and Escherichia coli ATP synthases) plays at least a structural role in the assembly of the whole complex. Disruption of the ATP4 gene also had a dramatic effect on the assembly of other mitochondrial complexes. Thus, the cytochrome oxidase activity of the mutant strain was about five times lower than that of the wild type. In addition, a high percentage of spontaneous rho- mutants was detected.  相似文献   

16.
We have identified Cox20p, a 23.8-kDa protein of the mitochondrial inner membrane that is involved in the biogenesis of the yeast cytochrome oxidase complex. Cytochrome oxidase subunit 2 (Cox2p) accumulates as a precursor in cox20 mutants, suggesting a defect in biogenesis of this mitochondrially encoded protein. The inability of cox20 mutants to process the subunit 2 precursor (pCox2p) is not due to impaired export of the protein across the inner membrane or to an inactive Imp1p/Imp2p peptidase. Rather, Cox20p specifically binds the newly synthesized pCox2p, a step required to present the exported pCox2p as a substrate to the Imp1p peptidase. All of the endogenous pCox2p accumulated in an Deltaimp1 mutant, and a small fraction of Cox2p in wild type yeast, is detected in a complex with Cox20p. Following maturation Cox2p remained associated with Cox20p, prior to assembling into the cytochrome oxidase complex. We propose that Cox20p acts as a membrane-bound chaperone necessary for cleavage of pCox2p and for interaction of the mature protein with other subunits of cytochrome oxidase in a later step of the assembly process.  相似文献   

17.
The cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex is one of two terminal oxidases which are components of the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. This membrane-bound enzyme catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol and the four-electron reduction of oxygen to water. Enzyme turnover generates proton and voltage gradients across the bilayer. The oxidase is a heterodimer containing 2 mol of protoheme IX and 1 or 2 mol of heme d per mol of complex. To explain the functional properties of the enzyme, a simple model has been proposed in which it is speculated that the heme prosthetic groups define two separate active sites on opposite sides of the membrane at which the oxidation of quinol and the reduction of water, respectively, are catalyzed. This paper represents an initial effort to define the axial ligands of each of the three or four hemes within the amino acid sequence of the oxidase subunits. Each of the 10 histidine residues has been altered by site-directed mutagenesis with the expectation that histidine residues are likely candidates for heme ligands. Eight of the 10 histidine residues are not essential for enzyme activity, and 2 appear to function as heme axial ligands. Histidine 186 in subunit I is required for the cytochrome b558 component of the enzyme. This residue is likely to be located near the periplasmic surface of the membrane. Histidine 19, near the amino terminus of subunit I also appears to be a heme ligand. It is concluded that two of the four or five expected heme axial ligands have been tentatively identified, although further work is required to confirm these conclusions. A minimum of two additional axial ligands must be residues other than histidine.  相似文献   

18.
Photosystem I contains several peripheral membrane proteins that are located on either positive (luminal) or negative (stromal or cytoplasmic) sides of thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts or cyanobacteria. Incorporation of two peripheral subunits into photosystem I of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis species PCC 6803 was studied using a reconstitution system in which radiolabeled subunits II (PsaD) and IV (PsaE) were synthesized in vitro and incubated with the isolated thylakoid membranes. After such incubation, the subunits were found in the membranes and were resistant to digestion with proteases and removal by 2 molar NaBr. All of the radioactive proteins incorporated in the membrane were found in the photosystem I complex. The subunit II was assembled specifically into cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes and not into Escherichia coli cell membranes or thylakoid membranes isolated from spinach. The assembly process did not require ATP or proton motive force, and it was not stimulated by ATP. The assembly of subunits II and IV into thylakoid membranes isolated from the strain AEK2, which lacks the gene psaE, was increased two- to threefold. The incorporation of subunit II was 15 to 17 times higher in the thylakoids obtained from the strain ADK3 in which the gene psaD has been inactivated. However, assembly of subunit IV in the same thylakoids was reduced by 65%, demonstrating that the presence of subunit II is required for the stable assembly of subunit IV. Large deletions in subunit II prevented its incorporation into thylakoids and assembly into photosystem I, suggesting that the overall conformation of the protein rather than a specific targeting sequence is required for its assembly into photosystem I.  相似文献   

19.
The assembly of cytochrome oxidase was studied in isolated rat liver mitochondria and isolated rat hepatocytes labelled in vitro with L-[35S]methionine. This was achieved by studying the temporal association of radioactive subunits which are immunoabsorbed with antibodies against subunits I, II and the holoenzyme. Antibodies against the holoenzyme were shown to be highly specific for subunit V. The results show that subunit I appears in the holoenzyme late in the assembly process. No radioactive subunit I is absorbed with antiserum against subunit II or the holoenzyme (subunit V) after a 30 min pulse in either isolated mitochondria or hepatocytes. However, both antisera absorb radioactive subunits I after a 150 min chase in isolated hepatocytes. This was confirmed using antibodies against subunit I, which absorbed only radioactive subunit I after a 30 min pulse but absorbed radioactive subunits I-III and VI after a 150 min chase. Thus, the late assembly of radioactive subunit I is explained by a temporal sequence in the assembly process and not by the presence of a large, non-radioactive pool of subunit I. Using the above approach and the three specific antisera, the following temporal sequence in the assembly of cytochrome oxidase was established. Subunits II and III assemble rapidly with each other or with cytoplasmically translated subunit VI. This complex of three peptides in turn assembles slowly with subunit I or with the other cytoplasmically translated subunits. The early association of subunit VI with the mitochondrially translated subunits II and III suggests a possible role of the former in integration of the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

20.
A systemic study has been made of copper and heme a binding to subunits of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase. Copper and heme a were readily mobilized by ionic detergents, high ionic strengths, temperatures above 0 degrees C, thiol compounds, and gel-bound peroxides and free radicals when the subunits of the oxidase were dissociated from one another during polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Most subunits showed some affinity for heme a and copper under these conditions. However, in the presence of specific mixtures of ionic and nonionic detergents (e.g. 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.025% Triton X-100) at temperatures below 0 degrees C and in buffers of low ionic strength using 10 to 12% polyacrylamide gels preelectrophoresed for 3 days with thioglycolate, about 90% of the Cu was found on subunit II (Mr = 24,100), and heme a was found in equal amounts of subunits I (Mr = 35,800) and II. The oxidized-reduced and reduced-CO absorption spectra of these subunits resembled those of cytochrome c oxidase. It appears probable that in the native enzyme, subunit I contains heme a and subunit II contains copper and heme a. A relationship of mammalian cytochrome c oxidase to the two-subunit microbial cytochrome oxidase systems appears to exist.  相似文献   

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