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1.
This review summarises our current understanding of two of the main types of quinoprotein dehydrogenase in which pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) is the only prosthetic group. These are the soluble methanol dehydrogenase and the membrane glucose dehydrogenase (mGDH). The membrane GDH has an additional N-terminal domain by which it is tightly anchored to the membrane, and a periplasmic domain whose structure has been modelled on the X-ray structure of the alpha-subunit of MDH which contains PQQ in the active site. This review discusses their structures and mechanisms, concentrating particularly on the pathways for electron transfer from the reduced PQQ, through the protein, to their electron acceptors. In MDH, this is the specific cytochrome c(L), the electron transfer pathway probably involving the unique disulphide ring in the active site. By contrast, mGDH contains a permanently bound ubiquinone, which acts as a single electron carrier, mediating electron transfer through the protein to the membrane ubiquinone.  相似文献   

2.
The type II quinohemoprotein alcohol dehydrogenase of Pseudomonas putida is a periplasmic enzyme that oxidizes substrate alcohols to the aldehyde and transfers electrons first to pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) and then to an internal heme group. The 1.9 A resolution crystal structure reveals that the enzyme contains a large N-terminal eight-stranded beta propeller domain (approximately 60 kDa) similar to methanol dehydrogenase and a small C-terminal c-type cytochrome domain (approximately 10 kDa) similar to the cytochrome subunit of p-cresol methylhydoxylase. The PQQ is bound near the axis of the propeller domain about 14 A from the heme. A molecule of acetone, the product of the oxidation of isopropanol present during crystallization, appears to be bound in the active site cavity.  相似文献   

3.
In this review, we compare the intra-molecular and inter-molecular electron transfer rate constants of the high-potential branch of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. Several methods such as the conventional stopped-flow spectroscopy, pH-induced electron transfer, photoactivated ruthenium complex induced electron transfer and photoreleaseable caged quinol, have been used to determine reaction rates between redox centers in an attempt to elucidate the reaction mechanism of this vital energy conserving complex. Since the most active pure cytochrome bc(1) complex has a turnover number of 800 s(-1), any step with a rate constant much larger than this will not be rate-limiting. The most likely rate-limiting step is the cytochrome b redox state governed movement of the head domain of iron-sulfur protein from its electron-accepting site ("fixed" or "b-state" position) to its electron donating site ("c(1)-state" position).  相似文献   

4.
The structure of cytochrome cL from Methylobacterium extorquens has been determined by X-ray crystallography to a resolution of 1.6 A. This unusually large, acidic cytochrome is the physiological electron acceptor for the quinoprotein methanol dehydrogenase in the periplasm of methylotrophic bacteria. Its amino acid sequence is completely different from that of other cytochromes but its X-ray structure reveals a core that is typical of class I cytochromes c, having alpha-helices folded into a compact structure enclosing the single haem c prosthetic group and leaving one edge of the haem exposed. The haem is bound through thioether bonds to Cys65 and Cys68, and the fifth ligand to the haem iron is provided by His69. Remarkably, the sixth ligand is provided by His112, and not by Met109, which had been shown to be the sixth ligand in solution. Cytochrome cL is unusual in having a disulphide bridge that tethers the long C-terminal extension to the body of the structure. The crystal structure reveals that, close to the inner haem propionate, there is tightly bound calcium ion that is likely to be involved in stabilization of the redox potential, and that may be important in the flow of electrons from reduced pyrroloquinoline quinone in methanol dehydrogenase to the haem of cytochrome cL. As predicted, both haem propionates are exposed to solvent, accounting for the unusual influence of pH on the redox potential of this cytochrome.  相似文献   

5.
Flavocytochrome b(2) catalyzes the oxidation of L-lactate to pyruvate and the transfer of electrons to cytochrome c. The enzyme consists of a flavin-binding domain, which includes the active site for lacate oxidation, and a b(2)-cytochrome domain, required for efficient cytochrome c reduction. To better understand the structure and function of intra- and interprotein electron transfer, we have determined the crystal structure of the independently expressed flavin-binding domain of flavocytochrome b(2) to 2.50 A resolution and compared this with the structure of the intact enzyme, redetermined at 2.30 A resolution, both structures being from crystals cooled to 100 K. Whereas there is little overall difference between these structures, we do observe significant local changes near the interface region, some of which impact on amino acid side chains, such as Arg289, that have been shown previously to have an important role in catalysis. The disordered loop region found in flavocytochrome b(2) and its close homologues remain unresolved in frozen crystals of the flavin-binding domain, implying that the presence of the b(2)-cytochrome domain is not responsible for this positional disorder. The flavin-binding domain interacts poorly with cytochrome c, but we have introduced acidic residues in the interdomain interface region with the aim of enhancing cytochrome c binding. While the mutations L199E and K201E within the flavin-binding domain resulted in unimpaired lactate dehydrogenase activity, they failed to enhance electron-transfer rates with cytochrome c. This is most likely due to the disordered loop region obscuring all or part of the surface having the potential for productive interaction with cytochrome c.  相似文献   

6.
The genus Shewanella produces a unique small tetraheme cytochrome c that is implicated in the iron oxide respiration pathway. It is similar in heme content and redox potential to the well known cytochromes c(3) but related in structure to the cytochrome c domain of soluble fumarate reductases from Shewanella sp. We report the crystal structure of the small tetraheme cytochrome c from Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 in two crystal forms and two redox states. The overall fold and heme core are surprisingly different from the soluble fumarate reductase structures. The high resolution obtained for an oxidized orthorhombic crystal (0.97 A) revealed several flexible regions. Comparison of the six monomers in the oxidized monoclinic space group (1.55 A) indicates flexibility in the C-terminal region containing heme IV. The reduced orthorhombic crystal structure (1.02 A) revealed subtle differences in the position of several residues, resulting in decreased solvent accessibility of hemes and the withdrawal of a positive charge from the molecular surface. The packing between monomers indicates that intermolecular electron transfer between any heme pair is possible. This suggests there is no unique site of electron transfer on the surface of the protein and that electron transfer partners may interact with any of the hemes, a process termed "electron-harvesting." This optimizes the efficiency of intermolecular electron transfer by maximizing chances of productive collision with redox partners.  相似文献   

7.
The cytochrome bc1 complex from bovine heart mitochondria is a multi-functional enzyme complex. In addition to electron and proton transfer activity, the complex also processes an activatable peptidase activity and a superoxide generating activity. The crystal structure of the complex exists as a closely interacting functional dimer. There are 13 transmembrane helices in each monomer, eight of which belong to cytochrome b, and five of which belong to cytochrome c1, Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP), subunits 7, 10 and 11, one each. The distances of 21 A between bL heme and bH heme and of 27 A between bL heme and the iron-sulfur cluster (FeS), accommodate well the observed fast electron transfers between the involved redox centers. However, the distance of 31 A between heme c1 and FeS, makes it difficult to explain the high electron transfer rate between them. 3D structural analyses of the bc1 complexes co-crystallized with the Qu site inhibitors suggest that the extramembrane domain of the ISP may undergo substantial movement during the catalytic cycle of the complex. This suggestion is further supported by the decreased in the cytochrome bc1 complex activity and the increased in activation energy for mutants with increased rigidity in the neck region of ISP.  相似文献   

8.
Soluble quinoprotein dehydrogenases oxidize a wide range of sugar, alcohol, amine, and aldehyde substrates. The physiological electron acceptors for these enzymes are not pyridine nucleotides but are other soluble redox proteins. This makes these enzymes and their electron acceptors excellent systems with which to study mechanisms of long-range interprotein electron transfer reactions. The tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ)-dependent methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) transfers electrons to a blue copper protein, amicyanin. It has been possible to alter the rate of electron transfer by using different redox forms of MADH, varying reaction conditions, and performing site-directed mutagenesis on these proteins. From kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of the reaction rates, it was possible to determine whether a change in rate is due a change in Delta G(0), electronic coupling, reorganization energy or kinetic mechanism. Examples of each of these cases are discussed in the context of the known crystal structures of the electron transfer protein complexes. The pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent methanol dehydrogenase transfers electrons to a c-type cytochrome. Kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of this reaction indicated that this electron transfer reaction was conformationally coupled. Quinohemoproteins possess a quinone cofactor as well as one or more c-type hemes within the same protein. The structures of a PQQ-dependent quinohemoprotein alcohol dehydrogenase and a TTQ-dependent quinohemoprotein amine dehydrogenase are described with respect to their roles in intramolecular and intermolecular protein electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

9.
Paracoccus denitrificans produces two primary enzymes for the amine oxidation, tryptophan-tryptophylquinone (TTQ)-containing methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and quinohemoprotein amine dehydrogenase (QH-AmDH). QH-AmDH has a novel cofactor, cysteine tryptophylquinone (CTQ) and two hemes c. In this work, the redox potentials of three redox centers in QH-AmDH were determined by a mediator-assisted continuous-flow column electrolytic spectroelectrochemical technique. Kinetics of the electron transfer from QH-AmDH to three kinds of metalloproteins, amicyanin, cytochrome c(550), and horse heart cytochrome c were examined on the basis of the theory of mediated-bioelectrocatalysis. All these metalloproteins work as a good electron acceptor of QH-AmDH and donate the electron to the terminal oxidase of P. denitrificans, which was revealed by reconstitution of the respiratory chain. These properties are in marked contrast with those of MADH, which shows high specificity to amicyanin. These electron transfer kinetics are discussed in terms of thermodynamics and structural property.  相似文献   

10.
Quinoprotein alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) of acetic acid bacteria is a membrane-bound enzyme that functions as the primary dehydrogenase in the ethanol oxidase respiratory chain. It consists of three subunits and has a pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) in the active site and four heme c moieties as electron transfer mediators. Of these, three heme c sites and a further site have been found to be involved in ubiquinone (Q) reduction and ubiquinol (QH2) oxidation respectively (Matsushita et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1409, 154-164 (1999)). In this study, it was found that ADH solubilized and purified with dodecyl maltoside, but not with Triton X-100, had a tightly bound Q, and thus two different ADHs, one having the tightly bound Q (Q-bound ADH) and Q-free ADH, could be obtained. The Q-binding sites of both the ADHs were characterized using specific inhibitors, a substituted phenol PC16 (a Q analog inhibitor) and antimycin A. Based on the inhibition kinetics of Q2 reductase and ubiquinol-2 (Q2H2) oxidase activities, it was suggested that there are one and two PC16-binding sites in Q-bound ADH and Q-free ADH respectively. On the other hand, with antimycin A, only one binding site was found for Q2 reductase and Q2H2 oxidase activities, irrespective of the presence of bound Q. These results suggest that ADH has a high-affinity Q binding site (QH) besides low-affinity Q reduction and QH2 oxidation sites, and that the bound Q in the QH site is involved in the electron transfer between heme c moieties and bulk Q or QH2 in the low-affinity sites.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c is the specific and efficient electron transfer mediator between the two last redox complexes of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Its interaction with both partner proteins, namely cytochrome c(1) (of complex III) and the hydrophilic Cu(A) domain (of subunit II of oxidase), is transient, and known to be guided mainly by electrostatic interactions, with a set of acidic residues on the presumed docking site on the Cu(A) domain surface and a complementary region of opposite charges exposed on cytochrome c. Information from recent structure determinations of oxidases from both mitochondria and bacteria, site-directed mutagenesis approaches, kinetic data obtained from the analysis of isolated soluble modules of interacting redox partners, and computational approaches have yielded new insights into the docking and electron transfer mechanisms. Here, we summarize and discuss recent results obtained from bacterial cytochrome c oxidases from both Paracoccus denitrificans, in which the primary electrostatic encounter most closely matches the mitochondrial situation, and the Thermus thermophilus ba(3) oxidase in which docking and electron transfer is predominantly based on hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

12.
The mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex is a multifunctional membrane protein complex. It catalyzes electron transfer, proton translocation, peptide processing, and superoxide generation. Crystal structure data at 2.9 A resolution not only establishes the location of the redox centers and inhibitor binding sites, but also suggests a movement of the head domain of the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) during bc1 catalysis and inhibition of peptide-processing activity during complex maturation. The functional importance of the movement of extramembrane (head) domain of ISP in the bc1 complex is confirmed by analysis of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex mutants with increased rigidity in the ISP neck and by the determination of rate constants for acid/base-induced intramolecular electron transfer between [2Fe-2S] and heme c1 in native and inhibitor-loaded beef complexes. The peptide-processing activity is activated in bovine heart mitochondrial bc1 complex by nonionic detergent at concentrations that inactivate electron transfer activity. This peptide-processing activity is shown to be associated with subunits I and II by cloning, overexpression and in vitro reconstitution. The superoxide-generation site of the cytochrome bc1 complex is located at reduced bL and Q*-. The reaction is membrane potential-, and cytochrome c-dependent.  相似文献   

13.
PQQ glucose dehydrogenase from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus (GDH-B) is one of the most industrially attractive enzymes, as a sensor constituent for glucose sensing, because of its high catalytic activity and insensitivity to oxygen. We attempted to engineer GDH-B to enable electron transfer to the electrode in the absence of artificial electron mediator by mimicking the domain structure of the quinohemoprotein ethanol dehydrogenase (QH-EDH) from Comamonas testosteroni, which is composed of a PQQ-containing catalytic domain and a cytochrome c domain. We genetically fused the cytochrome c domain of QH-EDH to the C-terminal of GDH-B. The constructed fusion protein showed not only intra-molecular electron transfer, between PQQ and heme of the cytochrome c domain, but also electron transfer from heme to the electrode, thereby allowing the construction of a direct electron transfer-type glucose sensor.  相似文献   

14.
The transdielectric charge separation reaction catalyzed by the ubiquinol-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase is achieved in two fractional steps. We present a detailed analysis which addresses the nature of the charge transferred, the redox groups directly involved in charge separation and the contributions of each to the full charge separation catalyzed by the enzyme. Accounting for light saturation effects, reaction centers unconnected to cytochrome c2 and the fraction of total cytochrome bc1 turning over per flash permits detailed quantitation of: (1) the red carotenoid bandshift associated with electron transfer between ubiquinol at site Qz and the high- (2Fe2S center, cytochrome c1) and low-potential (cytochrome bL, cytochrome bH) components of cytochrome bc1; (2) the blue bandshift accompanying reduction of cytochrome bH by ubiquinol via site Qc (the reverse of the physiological reaction); and (3) the effect of delta psi on the Qc-cytochrome bH redox equilibrium. Studies were performed at pH values above and below the redox-linked pK values of the redox centers known to be involved in each reaction at equilibrium. The conclusions of this study may be summarized as follows: (1) there is no transdielectric charge separation apparent in the redox reactions between Qz and cytochrome bL, 2Fe2S and cytochrome c1 (in agreement with Glaser, E. and Crofts, A.R. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 766, 223-235), i.e., charge separation accompanies electron transfer between cytochrome bL and cytochrome bH; (2) the redox reactions between cytochrome bL and cytochrome bH and between cytochrome bH and Qc constitute the full electrogenic span; (3) electron transfer between cytochrome bL and cytochrome bH contributes approx. 60% of this span; (4) electron transfer between cytochrome bH and Qc contributes 45-55% as calculated from the blue bandshift or the delta psi-dependent equilibrium shift; (5) there is no discernable pH dependence of the Qz-cytochrome bH or Qc-cytochrome bH charge-separation reactions; (6) cytochrome bL, Qz, 2Fe2S, and cytochrome c1 are on the periplasmic side out of the low dielectric part of the membrane while cytochrome bH is buried in the low dielectric medium; (7) electron transfer is the predominant if not the sole contributor to charge separation; (8) Qz and Qc are on opposite sides of the membrane dielectric profile.  相似文献   

15.
The complex formation between the tetraheme cytochrome c3 and hexadecaheme high molecular weight cytochrome c (Hmc), the structure of which has recently been resolved, has been characterized by cross-linking experiments, EPR, electrochemistry and kinetic analysis, and some key parameters of the interaction were determined. The analysis of electron transfer between [Fe] hydrogenase, cytochrome c3 and Hmc demonstrates a redox-shuttling role of cytochrome c3 in the pathway from hydrogenase to Hmc, and shows an effect of redox state on the interaction between the two cytochromes. The role of polyheme cytochromes in electron transfer from periplasmic hydrogenase to membrane redox proteins is assessed. A model with cytochrome c3 as an intermediate between hydrogenase and various polyheme cytochromes is proposed and its physiological consequences are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Crystal structure and electron transfer properties of cytochrome c3   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The crystal structure of cytochrome c3 from the sulfate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, Norway strain, has been determined through the fitting of the recently completed primary structure to a 2.5 A resolution electron density map. The phase calculations were based on three mercurial derivatives; anomalous scattering data were used to refine the four heme iron positions. A preliminary refinement of the molecular model has led to a conventional crystallographic R factor of 34%. Cytochrome c3 is folded in two structural domains with one heme in each, the two other heme moieties lying in a large groove dividing the molecule. The core of the protein is the compact four-heme cluster which presents a relatively high degree of solvent exposure. The structural pattern of redox centers suggests that electron transfer might occur through direct contacts between some of the heme groups, via the overlapping system of pi oribitals or via intervening amino acid side chains or both.  相似文献   

17.
We have examined the spatial organization of the redox active centers in the Site II segment of the bovine heart respiratory chain by using reconstituted proteoliposomes of ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (Complex III or cytochrome bc1 complex) and EPR techniques. 1) Mutual spin-spin interactions between intrinsic redox active centers were detected. The spin relaxation of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster was enhanced by the paramagnetic cytochrome c1 and b566 hemes but not by cytochrome b562. 2) Relative distances of the individual redox active centers to the P-side and N-side surfaces of the reconstituted Complex III proteoliposome were measured by our paramagnetic probe method (Blum, H., Bowyer, J. R., Cusanovich, M. A., Waring, A. J., and Ohnishi, T. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 748, 418-428). The cytochrome b562 heme was shown to be close to the middle of the phospholipid bilayer, while the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster and cytochrome b566 heme were assigned to be near the P-side surface level of the membrane. This probe method is a low resolution technique from the structural viewpoint; however, it can provide direct and reliable assignment of the topographical locations of redox active centers within the membrane. This is the first direct demonstration of the transmembranous location of the two cytochrome b hemes, although electron transfer between these two hemes crosses only half of the membrane thickness. Our data support the assignment of transmembranous distribution of the redox active centers based on electrochromic measurements (Robertson, D.E., and Dutton, P.L. (1988) Biochim, Biophys. Acta 935, 273-291). The implication of these results on the mechanism of Site II energy coupling is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Here we report the crystal structures of a ternary electron transfer complex showing extensive motion at the protein interface. This physiological complex comprises the iron-sulfur flavoprotein trimethylamine dehydrogenase and electron transferring flavoprotein (ETF) from Methylophilus methylotrophus. In addition, we report the crystal structure of free ETF. In the complex, electron density for the FAD domain of ETF is absent, indicating high mobility. Positions for the FAD domain are revealed by molecular dynamics simulation, consistent with crystal structures and kinetic data. A dual interaction of ETF with trimethylamine dehydrogenase provides for dynamical motion at the protein interface: one site acts as an anchor, thereby allowing the other site to sample a large range of interactions, some compatible with rapid electron transfer. This study establishes the role of conformational sampling in multi-domain redox systems, providing insight into electron transfer between ETFs and structurally distinct redox partners.  相似文献   

19.
Two proteins isolated from Paracoccus denitrificans, the copper-containing electron carrier amicyanin and the pyrroloquinoline quinone-containing enzyme methylamine dehydrogenase, have been shown to form a complex. Complex formation between methylamine dehydrogenase and either oxidized or reduced amicyanin resulted in alterations in the absorbance spectrum of the pyrroloquinoline quinone prosthetic group of methylamine dehydrogenase. Binding of amicyanin to the enzyme exhibited positive cooperativity. Complex formation with methylamine dehydrogenase shifted the oxidation-reduction midpoint potential of amicyanin by 73 mV, from +294 to +221 mV, making electron transfer from amicyanin to cytochrome c551 (Em = +190 mV) thermodynamically possible.  相似文献   

20.
A ternary electron transfer protein complex has been crystallized and a preliminary structure investigation has been carried out. The complex is composed of a quinoprotein, methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH), a blue copper protein, amicyanin, and a c-type cytochrome (c551i). All three proteins were isolated from Paracoccus denitrificans. The crystals of the complex are orthorhombic, space group C222(1) with cell dimensions a = 148.81 A, b = 68.85 A, and c = 187.18 A. Two types of isomorphous crystals were prepared: one using native amicyanin and the other copper-free apo-amicyanin. The diffraction data were collected at 2.75 A resolution from the former and at 2.4 A resolution from the latter. The location of the MADH portion was determined by molecular replacement. The copper site of the amicyanin molecule was located in an isomorphous difference Fourier while the iron site of the cytochrome was found in an anomalous difference Fourier. The MADH from P. denitrificans (PD-MADH) is an H2L2 hetero-tetramer with the H subunit containing 373 residues and the L subunit 131 residues, the latter containing a novel redox cofactor, tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ). The amicyanin of P. denitrificans contains 105 residues and the cytochrome c551i contains 155 residues. The ternary complex consists of one MADH tetramer with two molecules of amicyanin and two of c551i, forming a hetero-octamer; the octamer is located on a crystallographic diad. The relative positions of the three redox centers--i.e., the TTQ of MADH, the copper of amicyanin, and the heme group of c55li--are presented.  相似文献   

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