首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
2.
Subunit structure of electron transfer flavoprotein   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The electron transfer flavoprotein from pig liver mitochondria is a 57,000-dalton electron transferase which links several primary flavoprotein dehydrogenases with the mitochondrial electron transport system. The protein was previously reported to be a dimer of apparently identical subunits. There are conflicting estimates in the literature regarding the FAD content of the protein. The results presented here clearly show that the protein contains nonidentical subunits based on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 8 M urea and sodium dodecyl sulfate. The molecular weights of the subunits are 31,000 and 27,000. Analysis of peptides generated by cleavage of the subunits with cyanogen bromide show that the subunits have different primary structures. This result and amino acid analyses of the protein and the purified subunits show that the heterogeneity cannot be due to proteolysis. Using an experimentally determined molar extinction coefficient for the protein-bound flavin, a minimum Mr = 55,000 was calculated, indicating that the protein contains 1 mol of FAD/mol of protein.  相似文献   

3.
Electron-transfer flavoprotein:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-Q oxidoreductase) catalyses the re-oxidation of reduced electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) with ubiquinone-1 (Q-1) as the electron acceptor. A kinetic assay for the enzyme was devised in which glutaryl-CoA in the presence of glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase was used to reduce ETFox. and the reduction of Q-1 was monitored at 275 nm. The partial reactions involved in the overall assay system were examined. Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase catalyses the rapid reduction of ETFox. to the anionic semiquinone (ETF.-), but reduces ETF.- to the fully reduced form (ETFhq) at a rate that is about 6-fold lower. ETF.-, but not ETFhq, is directly re-oxidized by Q-1 at a rate that, depending on the steady-state concentration of ETF.-, may contribute significantly to the overall reaction. ETF-Q oxidoreductase catalyses rapid disproportionation of ETF.- with an equilibrium constant of about 1.0 at pH 7.8. In the presence of Q-1 it also catalyses the re-oxidation of ETFhq at a rate that is faster than that of the overall reaction. Rapid-scan experiments indicated the formation of ETF.-, but its fractional concentration in the early stages of the re-oxidation of ETFhq is low. The data indicate that the re-oxidation of ETFhq proceeds at a rate that is adequate to account for the overall rate of electron transfer from glutaryl-CoA to Q-1. An unusual property of ETF-Q oxidoreductase seems to be that it not only catalyses the re-oxidation of the reduced forms of ETF but also facilitates the complete reduction of ETFox. to ETFhq by disproportionation of the radical.  相似文献   

4.
Electron transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) accepts electrons from electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) and reduces ubiquinone from the ubiquinone pool. It contains one [4Fe-4S] (2+,1+) and one FAD, which are diamagnetic in the isolated oxidized enzyme and can be reduced to paramagnetic forms by enzymatic donors or dithionite. In the porcine protein, threonine 367 is hydrogen bonded to N1 and O2 of the flavin ring of the FAD. The analogous site in Rhodobacter sphaeroides ETF-QO is asparagine 338. Mutations N338T and N338A were introduced into the R. sphaeroides protein by site-directed mutagenesis to determine the impact of hydrogen bonding at this site on redox potentials and activity. The mutations did not alter the optical spectra, EPR g-values, spin-lattice relaxation rates, or the [4Fe-4S] (2+,1+) to FAD point-dipole interspin distances. The mutations had no impact on the reduction potential for the iron-sulfur cluster, which was monitored by changes in the continuous wave EPR signals of the [4Fe-4S] (+) at 15 K. For the FAD semiquinone, significantly different potentials were obtained by monitoring the titration at 100 or 293 K. Based on spectra at 293 K the N338T mutation shifted the first and second midpoint potentials for the FAD from +47 and -30 mV for wild type to -11 and -19 mV, respectively. The N338A mutation decreased the potentials to -37 and -49 mV. Lowering the midpoint potentials resulted in a decrease in the quinone reductase activity and negligible impact on disproportionation of ETF 1e (-) catalyzed by ETF-QO. These observations indicate that the FAD is involved in electron transfer to ubiquinone but not in electron transfer from ETF to ETF-QO. Therefore, the iron-sulfur cluster is the immediate acceptor from ETF.  相似文献   

5.
Mitochondria from various organisms, especially plants, fungi and many bacteria contain so-called alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases that catalyse the same redox reaction as respiratory chain complex I, but do not contribute to the generation of transmembrane proton gradients. In eucaryotes, these enzymes are associated with the mitochondrial inner membrane, with their NADH reaction site facing either the mitochondrial matrix (internal alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases) or the cytoplasm (external alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases). Some of these enzymes also accept NADPH as substrate, some require calcium for activity. In the past few years, the characterisation of several alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases on the DNA and on the protein level, of substrate specificities, mitochondrial import and targeting to the mitochondrial inner membrane has greatly improved our understanding of these enzymes. The present review will, with an emphasis on yeast model systems, illuminate various aspects of the biochemistry of alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases, address recent developments and discuss some of the questions still open in the field.  相似文献   

6.
Electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) serves as an intermediate electron carrier between primary flavoprotein dehydrogenases and terminal respiratory chains in mitochondria and prokaryotic cells. The three-dimensional structures of human and Paracoccus denitrificans ETFs determined by X-ray crystallography indicate that the 4'-hydroxyl of the ribityl side chain of FAD is hydrogen bonded to N(1) of the flavin ring. We have substituted 4'-deoxy-FAD for the native FAD and investigated the analog-containing ETF to determine the role of this rare intra-cofactor hydrogen bond. The binding constants for 4'-deoxy-FAD and FAD with the apoprotein are very similar, and the energy of binding differs by only 2 kJ/mol. The overall two-electron oxidation-reduction potential of 4'-deoxy-FAD in solution is identical to that of FAD. However, the potential of the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD is 0.116 V less than the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the native protein. These data suggest that the 4'-hydoxyl-N(1) hydrogen bond stabilizes the anionic semiquinone in which negative charge is delocalized over the N(1)-C(2)O region. Transfer of the second electron to 4'-deoxy-FAD reconstituted ETF is extremely slow, and it was very difficult to achieve complete reduction of the flavin semiquinone to the hydroquinone. The turnover of medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase with native ETF and ETF containing the 4'-deoxy analogue was essentially identical when the reduced ETF was recycled by reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. However, the steady-state turnover of the dehydrogenase with 4'-deoxy-FAD was only 23% of the turnover with native ETF when ETF semiquinone formation was assayed directly under anaerobic conditions. This is consistent with the decreased potential of the oxidized semiquinone couple of the analog-containing ETF. ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD neither donates to nor accepts electrons from electron-transfer flavoprotein ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) at significant rates (相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
Crystal structures of protein complexes with electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF) have revealed a dual protein-protein interface with one region serving as anchor while the ETF FAD domain samples available space within the complex. We show that mutation of the conserved Glu-165beta in human ETF leads to drastically modulated rates of interprotein electron transfer with both medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and dimethylglycine dehydrogenase. The crystal structure of free E165betaA ETF is essentially identical to that of wild-type ETF, but the crystal structure of the E165betaA ETF.medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase complex reveals clear electron density for the FAD domain in a position optimal for fast interprotein electron transfer. Based on our observations, we present a dynamic multistate model for conformational sampling that for the wild-type ETF. medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase complex involves random motion between three distinct positions for the ETF FAD domain. ETF Glu-165beta plays a key role in stabilizing positions incompatible with fast interprotein electron transfer, thus ensuring high rates of complex dissociation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
The catalytic properties of the rotenone-sensitive NADH:ubiquinone reductase (Complex I) in bovine heart submitochondrial particles and in inside-out vesicles derived from Paracoccus denitrificans and Rhodobacter capsulatus were compared. The prokaryotic enzymes catalyze the NADH oxidase and NADH:quinone reductase reactions with similar kinetic parameters as those for the mammalian Complex I, except for lower apparent affinities for the substrates--nucleotides. Unidirectional competitive inhibition of NADH oxidation by ADP-ribose, previously discovered for submitochondrial particles, was also evident for tightly coupled P. denitrificans vesicles, thus suggesting that a second, NAD(+)-specific site is present in the simpler prokaryotic enzyme. The inhibitor sensitivity of the forward and reverse electron transfer reactions was compared. In P. denitrificans and Bos taurus vesicles different sensitivities to rotenone and Triton X-100 for the forward and reverse electron transfer reactions were found. In bovine heart preparations, both reactions showed the same sensitivity to piericidin, and the inhibition was titrated as a straight line. In P. denitrificans, the forward and reverse reactions show different sensitivity to piericidin and the titrations of both activities were curvilinear with apparent I(50) (expressed as mole of inhibitor per mole of enzyme) independent of the enzyme concentration. This behavior is explained by a model involving two different sites rapidly interacting with piericidin within the hydrophobic phase.  相似文献   

13.
In mammals, the electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) is a heterodimeric protein composed of two subunits, alpha and beta, that is responsible for the oxidation of at least nine mitochondrial matrix flavoprotein dehydrogenases. Electrons accepted by ETF are further transferred to the main respiratory chain via the ETF ubiquinone oxide reductase (ETFQO). Sequence analysis of the unique Arabidopsis homologues of two subunits of ETF revealed their high similarity to both subunits of the mammalian ETF. Yeast two-hybrid experiments showed that the Arabidopsis ETFalpha and ETFbeta can form a heteromeric protein. Isolation and characterization of two independent T-DNA insertional Arabidopsis mutants of the ETFbeta gene revealed accelerated senescence and early death compared to wild-type during extended darkness. Furthermore in contrast to wild-type, the etfb mutants demonstrated a significant accumulation of several amino acids, isovaleryl CoA and phytanoyl CoA during dark-induced carbohydrate deprivation. These phenotypic characteristics of etfb mutants are broadly similar to those that we observed previously in Arabidopsis etfqo mutants, suggesting functional association between ETF and ETFQO in Arabidopsis, and confirming the essential roles of the ETF/ETFQO electron transfer complex in the catabolism of leucine and involvement in the chlorophyll degradation pathway activated during dark-induced carbohydrate deprivation.  相似文献   

14.
Two cDNA clones for the alpha-subunit of rat liver electron transfer flavoprotein were isolated and their nucleotide sequences were determined. The longer cDNA contained a protein-coding region of 900 nucleotides and 3'-noncoding region of 335 nucleotides. The identity of the clone was confirmed by matching the amino acid sequence predicted from the cDNA with the sequence of one of the lysyl endopeptidase-digested peptides from the purified alpha-subunit. The molecular weight of the protein calculated from the protein-coding nucleotides was approx. 3,000 daltons smaller than that of the precursor, suggesting that the cDNA was not of full length. The derived amino acid composition fairly agreed with the chemically determined amino acid composition of the purified alpha-subunit, indicating that the protein-coding region contains most of the mature alpha-subunit.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied the intrinsic fluorescence of the 12 tryptophan residues of electron-transfer flavoprotein:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF:QO). The fluorescence emission spectrum (lambda ex 295 nm) showed that the fluorescence is due to the tryptophan residues and that the contribution of the 22 tyrosine residues is minor. The emission maximum (lambda m 334 nm) and the bandwidth (delta lambda 1/2 56 nm) suggest that the tryptophans lie in hydrophobic environments in the oxidized protein. Further, these tryptophans are inaccessible to a range of ionic and nonionic collisional quenching agents, indicating that they are buried in the protein. Enzymatic or chemical reduction of ETF:QO results in a 5% increase in fluorescence with no change of lambda m or delta lambda 1/2. This change is reversible upon reoxidation and is likely to reflect a conformational change in the protein. The ubiquinone analogue Q0(CH2)10Br, a pseudosubstrate of ETF:QO (Km = 2.6 microM; kcat = 210 s-1), specifically quenches the fluorescence of one tryptophan residue (Kd = 1.6-3.2 microM) in equilibrium fluorescence titrations. The ubiquinone homologue UQ-2 (Km = 2 microM; kcat = 162 s-1) and the analogue Q0(CH2)10OH (Km = 2 microM; kcat = 132 s-1) do not quench tryptophan fluorescence; thus the brominated analogue acts as a static heavy atom quencher. We also describe a rapid purification for ETF:QO based on extraction of liver submitochondrial particles with Triton X-100 and three chromatographic steps, which results in yields 3 times higher than previously published methods.  相似文献   

16.
Submitochondrial particles catalyze the reduction of electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) by NADH and succinate under anaerobic conditions in reactions that are totally inhibited by rotenone and thenoyl trifluoroacetone, respectively. The particles also catalyze the ATP-dependent reduction of NAD+ by enzymatically reduced ETF. The latter reaction is inhibited by rotenone and carbonyl cyanide chlorophenylhydrazone and all three reactions are inhibited by antibody to electrontransfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO). These observations indicated that ETF-QO reacts with the pool of ubiquinone that is reduced by NADH and succinic dehydrogenases. Consistent with this hypothesis, NADH- and succinic-ETF reductase activities are inhibited 99% in ubiquinone-depleted particles, and reincorporation of exogenous ubiquinone restores at least 90% of these activities. Reduction of the bc1 complex by ETF and acyl CoA oxidase activity are also inhibited by antibody to ETF-QO. Myxothiazole and antimycin which inhibit the quinonol oxidation and quinone reduction sites, respectively, in the bc1 complex also inhibit electron transport from ETF-QO through the complex according to current models of the Q-cycle (Rich, P.R. (1986) J. Bioenerg. Biomembranes 18, 145-156). The results show that ETF-QO is an obligatory component of the electron transport pathway between ETF and the ubiquinone pool and suggest a mechanism for the steady-state turnover of ETF-QO.  相似文献   

17.
The indispensability of phospholipid and ubiquinone (Q) in mitochondrial electron transfer was studied by depleting phospholipid and Q in succinate-cytochrome c reductase and then replenishing the depleted enzyme. More than 90% of phospholipid and Q was removed by repeated ammonium sulfate-cholate fractionation. The depleted succinate-cytochrome c reductase showed no enzymatic activity for succinate leads to c or QH2 leads to c and yet retained most of the succinate leads to Q activity. All enzymatic activity was restored upon the addition of Q and phospholipid. Restoration required the addition of Q prior to the addition of phospholipid. Reversing the addition sequence or addition of a mixture of phospholipid and Q resulted only in a small restoration of activities. The conditions for restoration are given in detail. Removal of phospholipid from succinate-cytochrome c reductase resulted in reduction of cytochrome c1 in the absence of exogenous electron donor. Replenishing the preparation with phospholipid brought about the reoxidation of cytochrome c1 in the absence of electron acceptor or oxygen.  相似文献   

18.
MitoQ(10) is a ubiquinone that accumulates within mitochondria driven by a conjugated lipophilic triphenylphosphonium cation (TPP(+)). Once there, MitoQ(10) is reduced to its active ubiquinol form, which has been used to prevent mitochondrial oxidative damage and to infer the involvement of reactive oxygen species in signaling pathways. Here we show MitoQ(10) is effectively reduced by complex II, but is a poor substrate for complex I, complex III, and electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF):quinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QOR). This differential reactivity could be explained if the bulky TPP(+) moiety sterically hindered access of the ubiquinone group to enzyme active sites with a long, narrow access channel. Using a combination of molecular modeling and an uncharged analog of MitoQ(10) with similar sterics (tritylQ(10)), we infer that the interaction of MitoQ(10) with complex I and ETF-QOR, but not complex III, is inhibited by its bulky TPP(+) moiety. To explain its lack of reactivity with complex III we show that the TPP(+) moiety of MitoQ(10) is ineffective at quenching pyrene fluorophors deeply buried within phospholipid bilayers and thus is positioned near the membrane surface. This superficial position of the TPP(+) moiety, as well as the low solubility of MitoQ(10) in non-polar organic solvents, suggests that the concentration of the entire MitoQ(10) molecule in the membrane core is very limited. As overlaying MitoQ(10) onto the structure of complex III indicates that MitoQ(10) cannot react with complex III without its TPP(+) moiety entering the low dielectric of the membrane core, we conclude that the TPP(+) moiety does anchor the tethered ubiquinol group out of reach of the active site(s) of complex III, thus explaining its slow oxidation. In contrast the ubiquinone moiety of MitoQ(10) is able to quench fluorophors deep within the membrane core, indicating a high concentration of the ubiquinone moiety within the membrane and explaining its good anti-oxidant efficacy. These findings will facilitate the rational design of future mitochondria-targeted molecules.  相似文献   

19.
Pig liver electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) is rapidly reduced by sarcosine and dimethylglycine dehydrogenases to the anionic semiquinone form, the subsequent formation of the flavoquinol form being a much slower process. In the presence of tetrahydrofolate the yield of anionic semiquinone at the end of the rapid phase of reduction of ETF is only about 10% less than without tetrahydrofolate, as judged by e.p.r. spectroscopy. Tetrahydrofolate does not alter the rate of reduction of ETF by either sarcosine or dimethylglycine dehydrogenase. Nevertheless, it was clearly demonstrated that tetrahydrofolate is a substrate for both sarcosine and dimethylglycine dehydrogenases and is converted to N5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate.  相似文献   

20.
Glutaryl-coenzyme A (CoA) dehydrogenase and the electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) of Paracoccus denitrificans were purified to homogeneity from cells grown with glutaric acid as the carbon source. Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase had a molecular weight of 180,000 and was made up of four identical subunits with molecular weights of about 43,000 each of which contained one flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule. The enzyme catalyzed an oxidative decarboxylation of glutaryl-CoA to crotonyl-CoA, was maximally stable at pH 5.0, and lost activity readily at pH values above 7.0. The enzyme had a pH optimum in the range of 8.0 to 8.5, a catalytic center activity of about 960 min-1, and apparent Michaelis constants for glutaryl-CoA and pig liver ETF of about 1.2 and 2.5 microM, respectively. P. denitrificans ETF had a visible spectrum identical to that of pig liver ETF and was made up of two subunits, only one of which contained a flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule. The isoelectric point of P. denitrificans ETF was 4.45 compared with 6.8 for pig liver ETF. P. denitrificans ETF accepted electrons not only from P. denitrificans glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase, but also from the pig liver butyryl-CoA and octanoyl-CoA dehydrogenases. The apparent Vmax was of similar magnitude with either pig liver or P. denitrificans ETF as an electron acceptor for these dehydrogenases. P. denitrificans glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase and ETF were used to assay for the reduction of ubiquinone 1 by ETF-Q oxidoreductase in cholate extracts of P. denitrificans membranes. The ETF-Q oxidoreductase from P. denitrificans could accept electrons from either the bacterial or the pig liver ETF. In either case, the apparent Km for ETF was infinitely high. P. denitrificans ETF-Q oxidoreductase was purified from contaminating paramagnets, and the resultant preparation had electron paramagnetic resonance signals at 2.081, 1.938, and 1.879 G, similar to those of the mitochondrial enzyme.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号