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1.
《BBA》2002,1553(1-2):140-157
Succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR) as part of the trichloroacetic acid cycle and menaquinol-fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR) used for anaerobic respiration by Escherichia coli are structurally and functionally related membrane-bound enzyme complexes. Each enzyme complex is composed of four distinct subunits. The recent solution of the X-ray structure of QFR has provided new insights into the function of these enzymes. Both enzyme complexes contain a catalytic domain composed of a subunit with a covalently bound flavin cofactor, the dicarboxylate binding site, and an iron–sulfur subunit which contains three distinct iron–sulfur clusters. The catalytic domain is bound to the cytoplasmic membrane by two hydrophobic membrane anchor subunits that also form the site(s) for interaction with quinones. The membrane domain of E. coli SQR is also the site where the heme b556 is located. The structure and function of SQR and QFR are briefly summarized in this communication and the similarities and differences in the membrane domain of the two enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
A.P. Singh  P.D. Bragg 《BBA》1976,423(3):450-461
The uptake of proline and glutamine by cytochrome-deficient cells of Escherichia coli SASX76 grown aerobically on glucose or anaerobically on pyruvate was stimulated by these two substrates. Pyruvate could not stimulate transport in the glucose-grown cells. Uptake of these amino acids energized by glucose was inhibited by inhibitors of the Ca2+, Mg2+-stimulated ATPase such as DCCD, pyrophosphate, and azide, and by the uncouplers CCCP and 2,4-dinitrophenol. Glycerol (or glycerol 3-phosphate) in the presence of fumarate stimulated the transport of proline and glutamine under anaerobic conditions in cytochrome-deficient cells but not in membrane vesicles prepared from these cells although glycerol 3-phosphate-fumarate oxidoreductase activity could be demonstrated in the vesicle preparation. In contrast, in vesicles prepared from cytochrome-containing cells of E. coli SASX76 amino acid transport was energized under anaerobic conditions by this system. Inhibitors of the Ca2+, Mg2+-activated ATPase and uncoupling agents inhibited the uptake of proline and glutamine in cytochrome-deficient cells dependent on the glycerol-fumarate oxidoreductase system. Ferricyanide could replace fumarate as an electron acceptor to permit transport of phenylalanine in cytochrome-deficient or cytochrome- containing cells under anaerobic conditions. It is concluded that in cytochrome-deficient cells using glucose, pyruvate, or glycerol in the presence of fumarate, transport of both proline and glutamine under anaerobic conditions is energized by ATP through the Ca2+, Mg2+-activated ATPase. In cytochrome-containing cells under anaerobic conditions electron transfer between glycerol and fumarate can also drive transport of these amino acids.  相似文献   

3.
Strains of E. coli with fusions between the lac structural genes and the promoter region of the fumarate reductase system were constructed from a parental strain deleted in the native lac operon. Like fumarate reductase in wild-type cells, β-galactosidase in these fusion strains is inducible by fumarate, but only under anaerobic conditions. From one of these strains, three classes of mutants altered in the expression of the hybrid operon were isolated. By anaerobic selection for growth on lactose in the absence of fumarate, mutants that synthesize β-galactosidase constitutively both aerobically and anaerobically were obtained. By aerobic selection for growth on lactose in the presence of fumarate, mutants that are inducible in the enzyme both aerobically and anaerobically and mutants that are inducible in the enzyme only aerobically were obtained. The regulatory behaviors of the mutants studied suggest that substrate and respiratory control of the expression of the fumarate reductase complex are mechanistically connected.  相似文献   

4.
Succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate reductase from Escherichia coli.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR) as part of the trichloroacetic acid cycle and menaquinol-fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR) used for anaerobic respiration by Escherichia coli are structurally and functionally related membrane-bound enzyme complexes. Each enzyme complex is composed of four distinct subunits. The recent solution of the X-ray structure of QFR has provided new insights into the function of these enzymes. Both enzyme complexes contain a catalytic domain composed of a subunit with a covalently bound flavin cofactor, the dicarboxylate binding site, and an iron-sulfur subunit which contains three distinct iron-sulfur clusters. The catalytic domain is bound to the cytoplasmic membrane by two hydrophobic membrane anchor subunits that also form the site(s) for interaction with quinones. The membrane domain of E. coli SQR is also the site where the heme b556 is located. The structure and function of SQR and QFR are briefly summarized in this communication and the similarities and differences in the membrane domain of the two enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The Escherichia coli complex II homologues succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR, SdhCDAB) and menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR, FrdABCD) have remarkable structural homology at their dicarboxylate binding sites. Although both SQR and QFR can catalyze the interconversion of fumarate and succinate, QFR is a much better fumarate reductase, and SQR is a better succinate oxidase. An exception to the conservation of amino acids near the dicarboxylate binding sites of the two enzymes is that there is a Glu (FrdA Glu-49) near the covalently bound FAD cofactor in most QFRs, which is replaced with a Gln (SdhA Gln-50) in SQRs. The role of the amino acid side chain in enzymes with Glu/Gln/Ala substitutions at FrdA Glu-49 and SdhA Gln-50 has been investigated in this study. The data demonstrate that the mutant enzymes with Ala substitutions in either QFR or SQR remain functionally similar to their wild type counterparts. There were, however, dramatic changes in the catalytic properties when Glu and Gln were exchanged for each other in QFR and SQR. The data show that QFR and SQR enzymes are more efficient succinate oxidases when Gln is in the target position and a better fumarate reductase when Glu is present. Overall, structural and catalytic analyses of the FrdA E49Q and SdhA Q50E mutants suggest that coulombic effects and the electronic state of the FAD are critical in dictating the preferred directionality of the succinate/fumarate interconversions catalyzed by the complex II superfamily.  相似文献   

6.
Euglena gracilis cells grown under aerobic and anaerobic conditions were compared for their whole cell rhodoquinone and ubiquinone content and for major protein spots contained in isolated mitochondria as assayed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry sequencing. Anaerobically grown cells had higher rhodoquinone levels than aerobically grown cells in agreement with earlier findings indicating the need for fumarate reductase activity in anaerobic wax ester fermentation in Euglena. Microsequencing revealed components of complex III and complex IV of the respiratory chain and the E1beta subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase to be present in mitochondria of aerobically grown cells but lacking in mitochondria from anaerobically grown cells. No proteins were identified as specific to mitochondria from anaerobically grown cells. cDNAs for the E1alpha, E2, and E3 subunits of mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase were cloned and shown to be differentially expressed under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Their expression patterns differed from that of mitochondrial pyruvate:NADP(+) oxidoreductase, the N-terminal domain of which is pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, an enzyme otherwise typical of hydrogenosomes, hydrogen-producing forms of mitochondria found among anaerobic protists. The Euglena mitochondrion is thus a long sought intermediate that unites biochemical properties of aerobic and anaerobic mitochondria and hydrogenosomes because it contains both pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase and rhodoquinone typical of hydrogenosomes and anaerobic mitochondria as well as pyruvate dehydrogenase and ubiquinone typical of aerobic mitochondria. Our data show that under aerobic conditions Euglena mitochondria are prepared for anaerobic function and furthermore suggest that the ancestor of mitochondria was a facultative anaerobe, segments of whose physiology have been preserved in the Euglena lineage.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR) and menaquinol-fumarate reductase (QFR) are excellent model systems to understand the function of eukaryotic Complex II. They have structural and catalytic properties similar to their eukaryotic counterpart. An exception is that potent inhibitors of mammalian Complex II, such as thenoyltrifluoroacetone and carboxanilides, only weakly inhibit their bacterial counterparts. This lack of good inhibitors of quinone reactions and the higher level of side reactions in the prokaryotic enzymes has hampered the elucidation of the mechanism of quinone oxidation/reduction in E. coli Complex II. In this communication DT-diaphorase and an appropriate quinone are used to measure quinol-fumarate reductase activity and E. coli bo-oxidase and quinones are used to determine succinate-quinone reductase activity. Simple Michaelis kinetics are observed for both enzymes with ubiquinones and menaquinones in the succinate oxidase (forward) and fumarate reductase (reverse) reactions. The comparison of E. coli SQR and QFR demonstrates that 2-n-heptyl 4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO) is a potent inhibitor of QFR in both assays; however, SQR is not sensitive to HQNO. A series of 2-alkyl-4,6-dinitrophenols and pentachlorophenol were found to be potent competitive inhibitors of both SQR and QFR. In addition, the isolated E. coli SQR complex demonstrates a mixed-type inhibition with carboxanilides, whereas the QFR complex is resistant to this inhibitor. The kinetic properties of SQR and QFR suggest that either ubiquinone or menaquinone operates at a single exchangeable site working in forward or reverse reactions. The pH activity profiles for E. coli QFR and SQR are similar showing maximal activity between pH 7.4 and 7.8, suggesting the importance of similar catalytic groups in quinol deprotonation and oxidation.  相似文献   

8.
The anaerobically expressed fumarate reductase and aerobically expressed succinate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli comprise two different classes of succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (SQR), often termed respiratory complex II. The X-ray structures of both membrane-bound complexes have revealed that while the catalytic/soluble domains are structurally similar the quinone binding domains of the enzyme complexes are significantly different. These results suggest that the anaerobic and aerobic forms of complex II have evolved different mechanisms for electron and proton transfer in their respective membrane domains.  相似文献   

9.
N.J. Jacobs  J.M. Jacobs 《BBA》1976,449(1):1-9
Nitrate can serve as anaerobic electron acceptor for the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin in cell-free extracts of Escherichia coli grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate. Two kinds of experiments indicated this: anaerobic protoporphyrin formation from protoporphyrinogen, followed spectrophotometrically, was markedly stimulated by addition of nitrate; and anaerobic protoheme formation from protoporphyrinogen, determined by extraction procedures, was markedly stimulated by addition of nitrate. In contrast, anaerobic protoheme formation from protoporphyrin was not dependent upon addition of nitrate. This was the first demonstration of the ability of nitrate to serve as electron acceptor for this late step of heme synthesis. Previous studies with mammalian and yeast mitochondria had indicated an obligatory requirement for molecular oxygen at this step.In confirmation of our previous preliminary report, fumarate was also shown to be an electron acceptor for anaerobic protoporphyrinogen oxidation in extracts of E. coli grown anaerobically on fumarate. For the first time, anaerobic protoheme formation from protoporphyrinogen, but not from protoporphyrin, was shown to be dependent upon the addition of fumarate.The importance of these findings is 2-fold. First, they establish that enzymatic protoporphyrinogen oxidation can occur in the absence of molecular oxygen, in contrast to previous observations using mammalian and yeast mitochondria. Secondly, these findings help explain the ability of some facultative and anaerobic bacteria to form very large amounts of heme compounds, such as cytochrome pigments, when grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate or fumarate. In fact, denitrifying bacteria are known to form more cytochromes when grown anaerobically than during aerobic growth.An unexpected finding was that extracts of another bacterium, Staphylococcus epidermidis, exhibited very little ability to oxidize protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin as compared to E. coli extracts. This finding suggests some fundamental differences in these two organisms in this key step in heme synthesis. It is known that these two facultative organisms also differ in that E. coli synthesizes cytochrome during both aerobic and anaerobic growth, while Staphylococcus only synthesizes cytochromes when grown aerobically.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli HB101 was grown in complex medium under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Cells prepared under these two different conditions were characterized by two-dimensional protein gel electrophoresis, by NMR measurements under identical (anaerobic) conditions, and by measuring the kinetics of glucose uptake and catabolite end-product appearance in the medium under identical anaerobic conditions. Specific rates of glucose uptake and end-product formation were significantly greater for the anaerobically grown cells, which also exhibited lower intracellular concentrations of sugar phosphates, nucleoside di-and triphosphates, UDPG, and NAD(H). Two-dimensional gel electrophoretic analyses reveal changes in the intracellular levels of proteins involved in pyruvate catabolism that have been observed previously for E. coli grown in minimal medium under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Enzymes involved in the TCA cycle were not detected in cells grown aerobically or anaerobically in complex medium.  相似文献   

11.
A.P. Singh  P.D. Bragg 《BBA》1975,396(2):229-241
Escherichia coli SASX76 does not form cytochromes unless supplemented with 5-aminolevulinic acid. It can grow anaerobically on glycerol and dl-glycerol 3-phosphate in the absence of 5-aminolevulinic acid with fumarate but not with nitrate as the terminal electron acceptor. Cytochrome-independent NADH oxidase, glycerol 3-phosphate- and NADH-fumarate oxidoreductase activities are induced by anaerobic growth on a glycerol-fumarate medium. The pathway of electrons from substrate to fumarate involves menaquinone. The NADH-fumarate oxidoreductase and cytochrome-independent NADH oxidase systems are inhibited by piericidin A, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide, and iron chelating agents. Both systems can energize the membrane particles as indicated by quenching of atebrin fluorescence.  相似文献   

12.
In Escherichia coli, the complex II superfamily members succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (SQR) and quinol:fumarate reductase (QFR) participate in aerobic and anaerobic respiration, respectively. Complex II enzymes catalyze succinate and fumarate interconversion at the interface of two domains of the soluble flavoprotein subunit, the FAD binding domain and the capping domain. An 11-amino acid loop in the capping domain (Thr-A234 to Thr-A244 in quinol:fumarate reductase) begins at the interdomain hinge and covers the active site. Amino acids of this loop interact with both the substrate and a proton shuttle, potentially coordinating substrate binding and the proton shuttle protonation state. To assess the loop's role in catalysis, two threonine residues were mutated to alanine: QFR Thr-A244 (act-T; Thr-A254 in SQR), which hydrogen-bonds to the substrate at the active site, and QFR Thr-A234 (hinge-T; Thr-A244 in SQR), which is located at the hinge and hydrogen-bonds the proton shuttle. Both mutations impair catalysis and decrease substrate binding. The crystal structure of the hinge-T mutation reveals a reorientation between the FAD-binding and capping domains that accompanies proton shuttle alteration. Taken together, hydrogen bonding from act-T to substrate may coordinate with interdomain motions to twist the double bond of fumarate and introduce the strain important for attaining the transition state.  相似文献   

13.
The uptake of proline and glutamine by cytochrome-deficient cells of Escherichia coli SASX76 grown aerobically on glucose or anaerobically on pyruvate was stimulated by these two substrates. Pyruvate could not stimulate transport in the glucose-grown cells. Uptake of these amino acids energized by glucose was inhibited by inhibitors of the Ca2+, Mg2+-stimulated ATPase such as DCCD, pyrophosphate, and azide, and by the uncouplers CCCP and 2,4-dinitrophenol. Glycerol (or glycerol 3-phosphate) in the presence of fumarate stimulated the transport of proline and glutamine under anaerobic conditions in cytochrome-deficient cells but not in membrane vesicles prepared from these cells although glycerol 3-phosphate-fumarate oxidoreductase activity could be demonstrated in the vesicle preparation. In contrast, in vesicles prepared from cytochrome-containing cells of E. coli SASX76 amino acid transport was energized under anaerobic conditions by this system. Inhibitors of the Ca2+, Mg2+-activated ATPase and uncoupling agents inhibited the uptake of proline and glutamine in cytochrome-deficient cells dependent on the glycerol-fumarate oxidoreductase system. Ferricyanide could replace fumarate as an electron acceptor to permit transport of phenylalanine in cytochrome-deficient or cytochrome-containing cells under anaerobic conditions. It is concluded that in cytochrome-deficient cells using glucose, pyruvate, or glycerol in the presence of fumarate, transport of both proline and glutamine under under anaerobic conditions is energized by ATP through the Ca2+, Mg2+-activated ATPase. In cytochrome-containing cells under anaerobic conditions electron transfer between glycerol and fumarate can also drive transport of these amino acids.  相似文献   

14.
A membrane protein complex, succinate dehydrogenase (SQR) from Escherichia coli has been purified and crystallised. This enzyme is composed of four subunits containing FAD, three iron-sulphur clusters and one haem b as prosthetic groups. The obtained crystals belong to the hexagonal space group P6(3) with the unit-cell dimensions of a=b=123.8 A and c=214.6 A. An asymmetric unit of the crystals contains one SQR monomer (M(r) 120 kDa). A data set is now available at 4.0 A resolution with 88.1% completeness and 0.106 R(merge). We have obtained a molecular replacement solution that shows sensible molecular packing, using the soluble domain of E. coli QFR (fumarate reductase) as a search model. The packing suggests that E. coli SQR is a crystallographic trimer rather than a dimer as observed for the E. coli QFR.  相似文献   

15.
Membrane-bound succinate dehydrogenases (succinate:quinone reductases, SQR) and fumarate reductases (quinol:fumarate reductases, QFR) couple the oxidation of succinate to fumarate to the reduction of quinone to quinol and also catalyse the reverse reaction. SQR (respiratory complex II) is involved in aerobic metabolism as part of the citric acid cycle and of the aerobic respiratory chain. QFR is involved in anaerobic respiration with fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor, and is part of an electron transport chain catalysing the oxidation of various donor substrates by fumarate. QFR and SQR complexes are collectively referred to as succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (EC 1.3.5.1), have very similar compositions and are predicted to share similar structures. The complexes consist of two hydrophilic and one or two hydrophobic, membrane-integrated subunits. The larger hydrophilic subunit A carries covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide and subunit B contains three iron-sulphur centres. QFR of Wolinella succinogenes and SQR of Bacillus subtilis contain only one hydrophobic subunit (C) with two haem b groups. In contrast, SQR and QFR of Escherichia coli contain two hydrophobic subunits (C and D) which bind either one (SQR) or no haem b group (QFR). The structure of W. succinogenes QFR has been determined at 2.2 A resolution by X-ray crystallography (C.R.D. Lancaster, A. Kr?ger, M. Auer, H. Michel, Nature 402 (1999) 377-385). Based on this structure of the three protein subunits and the arrangement of the six prosthetic groups, a pathway of electron transfer from the quinol-oxidising dihaem cytochrome b to the site of fumarate reduction and a mechanism of fumarate reduction was proposed. The W. succinogenes QFR structure is different from that of the haem-less QFR of E. coli, described at 3.3 A resolution (T.M. Iverson, C. Luna-Chavez, G. Cecchini, D.C. Rees, Science 284 (1999) 1961-1966), mainly with respect to the structure of the membrane-embedded subunits and the relative orientations of soluble and membrane-embedded subunits. Also, similarities and differences between QFR transmembrane helix IV and transmembrane helix F of bacteriorhodopsin and their implications are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Three new structures of Escherichia coli succinate-quinone oxidoreductase (SQR) have been solved. One with the specific quinone-binding site (Q-site) inhibitor carboxin present has been solved at 2.4 Å resolution and reveals how carboxin inhibits the Q-site. The other new structures are with the Q-site inhibitor pentachlorophenol and with an empty Q-site. These structures reveal important details unresolved in earlier structures. Comparison of the new SQR structures shows how subtle rearrangements of the quinone-binding site accommodate the different inhibitors. The position of conserved water molecules near the quinone binding pocket leads to a reassessment of possible water-mediated proton uptake networks that complete reduction of ubiquinone. The dicarboxylate-binding site in the soluble domain of SQR is highly similar to that seen in high resolution structures of avian SQR (PDB 2H88) and soluble flavocytochrome c (PDB 1QJD) showing mechanistically significant structural features conserved across prokaryotic and eukaryotic SQRs.Succinate:quinone oxidoreductase (SQR,4 succinate dehydrogenase) and menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR, fumarate reductase), members of the Complex II family, are homologous integral membrane proteins which couple the interconversion of succinate and fumarate with quinone and quinol (14). SQR is a key enzyme in the Krebs cycle, oxidizing succinate to fumarate during aerobic growth and reducing quinone to quinol and, thus, acts as a direct link between the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chain. QFR is found in anaerobic or facultative bacteria and lower eukaryotes, where it couples the oxidation of reduced quinones to the reduction of fumarate (1, 4). Escherichia coli SQR has four subunits, two hydrophilic subunits exposed to the cytoplasm (SdhA and SdhB), which interact with two hydrophobic membrane-intrinsic subunits (SdhC and SdhD) (5). SdhA contains the dicarboxylate-binding site and a covalently bound FAD cofactor which cycles between FAD and FADH2 redox states during succinate oxidation (6). The electrons from succinate oxidation are sequentially transferred via a [2Fe-2S], a [4Fe-4S], and a [3Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster relay system in SdhB to a quinone-binding site (QP) located at the interface of the SdhB, SdhC, and SdhD subunits. SdhC and SdhD are both composed of three transmembrane helices and coordinate a low spin b-type heme via His residues contributed by each subunit (7, 8).The first structural information about members of the Complex II family came from x-ray structures of the QFR enzymes from E. coli at 3.3 Å resolution (9) and Wolinella succinogenes at 2.2 Å resolution (10). These structures revealed details of the overall architecture of the subunits, the position of key redox cofactors, the electron transfer pathway, and the quinone-binding sites. At around the same time, the structures of soluble fumarate reductases found in anaerobic and microaerophilic bacteria and structurally homologous to the flavoprotein subunit of Complex II were solved by x-ray crystallography (1). Analysis of these soluble fumarate reductases has proven particularly informative in describing the mechanism of fumarate reduction and succinate oxidation at the dicarboxylate-binding site (1114).Structures of SQRs lagged behind those of the QFRs until the structure of the E. coli enzyme was solved at 2.6 Å (15). This structure, solved in space group R32, revealed that the E. coli enzyme is packed as a trimer. The structures of the SdhA and SdhB subunits were highly similar to those of E. coli and W. succinogenes QFRs, but the transmembrane SdhC and SdhD subunits showed differences compared with their QFR counterparts. The structure revealed the position of the redox sites and the dicarboxylate- and quinone-binding (Q) sites. The heme b molecule was shown to lie away from the electron transfer pathway, suggesting electrons are preferentially transferred from the [3Fe-4S] cluster to ubiquinone, on the grounds of the edge-to-edge distances and redox potentials of the relevant groups. The structure revealed density in the Q-site that was interpreted as ubiquinone, and the position of the binding site was confirmed by the structure of the E. coli enzyme co-crystallized with the Q-site inhibitor 2-(1-methyl-hexyl)-4,6-dinitrophenol (DNP-17, PDB code 1NEN (15)). The E. coli enzyme was subsequently co-crystallized with the Q-site inhibitor Atpenin A5 (AA5) (PDB code 2ACZ (16)). This inhibitor was bound deeper into the quinone-binding site than ubiquinone or DNP-17, suggesting that there are two binding positions for ubiquinone in its binding site. The structure also identified a water-mediated proton pathway, proposed to deliver protons to the quinone-binding site. The first structure of a mitochondrial SQR was from porcine heart at 2.4 Å resolution (PDB code 1ZOY (17). This structure revealed a monomer in the asymmetric unit, suggesting that mitochondrial SQRs were likely to function as monomers. Superposition of the porcine and E. coli SQR structures revealed the high structural similarity of the SdhA and SdhB subunits and the conservation in position of the redox cofactors. Larger divergences were observed in the transmembrane subunits.Further structural information about SQRs was obtained by analysis of structures of avian SQR crystallized with oxaloacetate (2.2 Å resolution, PDB code 1YQ3), with 3-nitropropionate (2.4 Å resolution, PDB code 1YQ4), and with the Q-site inhibitor carboxin (2.1 Å resolution, PDB code 2FBW) (18). These structures revealed important differences in the position of key residues in the dicarboxylate-binding site compared with the E. coli and porcine structures. Arg-297 (equivalent to Arg-298 in porcine and Arg-286 in E. coli SQRs) was ideally located to act as a general base catalyst, accepting a proton during dehydrogenation of succinate, as in the soluble Shewanella flavocytochrome c3 (PDB code 1QJD) (11), suggesting conservation of mechanism between these distantly related enzymes. An unusual cis-serine peptide bond was proposed to position another arginine residue for binding dicarboxylates. Density for the dicarboxylate in 1YQ3 and 2FBW was shown to be distinctly non-planar and could be modeled by the “malate-like intermediate” seen in 1QJD. The nature of the ligand in the dicarboxylate site was further analyzed in a 1.74 Å resolution structure of avian SQR (PDB code 2H88), confirming the high structural similarity of the ligand and binding site residues in the SQR and flavocytochrome c3 structures (11, 12, 14).Despite the structural information described above, there are still unresolved issues regarding the structure and function of SQRs and QFRs. These include the location of conserved waters, which may form a channel involved in protonation of quinone, and the ability of the Q-site to accommodate different quinones and inhibitors. To further address these issues, we pursued structure-function studies of E. coli SQR. We developed alternative crystallization conditions that provided crystals more reproducibly and diffracting to higher resolution. By exchanging the enzyme into decyl-β-d-maltoside (DM) during purification, it was possible to crystallize the enzyme in the orthorhombic P212121 space group. These crystals routinely diffracted in the 3–3.5 Å resolution range. Co-crystallization with the biochemically well characterized Q-site inhibitor carboxin improved diffraction to 2.1–2.8 Å. This structure shows new features related to the dicarboxylate-binding site of E. coli SQR including a rare cis-peptide bond in SdhA, as found in avian SQR (14), which helps shape the geometry of the active site. Comparisons of the structure with those of SQR binding PCP and SQR with an empty Q-site show how subtle rearrangements of the Q-site accommodate the different inhibitors. The orientation of carboxin in the Q-site differs with computational predictions (16) and with that seen in avian SQR (2FBW). The position of conserved water molecules around the Q-site suggests a new water-mediated proton uptake pathway consistent with recent mutational and biophysical studies (19).  相似文献   

17.
Recombinant plasmids which carried portions of the Escherichia coli frd operon were constructed and their expression examined by in vivo complementation of E. Coli MI 1443. This strain lacked a chromosomal frd operon and was unable to grow anaerobically on glycerol and fumarate. Introduction of all four fumarate reductase subunits into E. coli MI1443 was essential for the restoration of growth. The FRD A, FRD B dimer (but neither subunit alone) was active in the benzyl viologen oxidase assay. Both FRD C and FRD D were required for membrane association of fumarate reductase and for the oxidation of reduced quinone analogues. Introduction into E. coli MI1443 of the frdABC and frdD genes on two separate plasmid vectors failed to restore anaerobic growth on glycerol and fumarate. Thus separation of the DNA coding for the FRD C and FRD D proteins affected the ability of fumarate reductase to assemble into a functional complex.  相似文献   

18.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an opportunistic pathogen that often initiates infections from a reservoir in the intestinal tract, may donate or acquire antibiotic resistance in an anaerobic environment. Only by including nitrate and nitrite in media could antibiotic-resistant and -sensitive strains of P. aeruginosa be cultured in a glove box isolator. These anaerobically grown cells remained sensitive to lytic phage isolated from sewage. After incubation with a phage lysate derived from P. aeruginosa 1822, anaerobic transfer of antibiotic resistance to recipients P. aeruginosa PS8EtBr and PS8EtBrR occurred at frequencies of 6.2 × 10−9 and 5.0 × 10−8 cells per plaque-forming unit, respectively. In experiments performed outside the isolator, transfer frequencies to PS8EtBr and PS8EtBrR were higher, 1.3 × 10−7 and 6.5 × 10−8 cells per plaque-forming unit, respectively. When P. aeruginosa 1822 was incubated aerobically with Escherichia coli B in medium containing nitrate and nitrite, the maximum concentration of carbenicillin-resistant E. coli B reached 25% of the total E. coli B population. This percentage declined to 0.01% of the total E. coli B population when anaerobically grown P. aeruginosa 1822 and E. coli B were combined and incubated in the glove box isolator. The highest concentration of the recipient population converted to antibiotic resistance occurred after 24 h of aerobic incubation, when an initially high donor/recipient ratio (>15) of cells was mixed. These data indicate that transfer of antibiotic resistance either by transduction between Pseudomonas spp. or by conjugation between Pseudomonas sp. and E. coli occurs under strict anaerobic conditions, although at lower frequencies than under aerobic conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Under anoxic conditions, the Escherichia coli oxygen sensor FNR (fumarate nitrate reductase regulator) is in the active state and contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Oxygen converts [4Fe-4S]FNR to inactive [2Fe-2S]FNR. After prolonged exposure to air in vitro, apoFNR lacking a Fe-S cluster is formed. ApoFNR can be differentiated from Fe-S-containing forms by the accessibility of the five Cys thiol residues, four of which serve as ligands for the Fe-S cluster. The presence of apoFNR in aerobically and anaerobically grown E. coli was analyzed in situ using thiol reagents. In anaerobically and aerobically grown cells, the membrane-permeable monobromobimane labeled one to two and four Cys residues, respectively; the same labeling pattern was found with impermeable thiol reagents after cell permeabilization. Alkylation of FNR in aerobic bacteria and counting the labeled residues by mass spectrometry showed a form of FNR with five accessible Cys residues, corresponding to apoFNR with all Cys residues in the thiol state. Therefore, aerobically growing cells contain apoFNR, whereas a significant amount of Fe-S-containing FNR was not detected under these conditions. Exposure of anaerobic bacteria to oxygen caused conversion of Fe-S-containing FNR to apoFNR within 6 min. ApoFNR from aerobic bacteria contained no disulfide, in contrast to apoFNR formed in vitro by air inactivation, and all Cys residues were in the thiol form.  相似文献   

20.
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