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1.
Lepp H  Svahn E  Faxén K  Brzezinski P 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4929-4935
Cytochrome c oxidase couples electron transfer from cytochrome c to O 2 to proton pumping across the membrane. In the initial part of the reaction of the reduced cytochrome c oxidase with O 2, an electron is transferred from heme a to the catalytic site, parallel to the membrane surface. Even though this electron transfer is not linked to proton uptake from solution, recently Belevich et al. [(2006) Nature 440, 829] showed that it is linked to transfer of charge perpendicular to the membrane surface (electrogenic reaction). This electrogenic reaction was attributed to internal transfer of a proton from Glu286, in the D proton pathway, to an unidentified protonatable site "above" the heme groups. The proton transfer was proposed to initiate the sequence of events leading to proton pumping. In this study, we have investigated electrogenic reactions in structural variants of cytochrome c oxidase in which residues in the second, K proton pathway of cytochrome c oxidase were modified. The results indicate that the electrogenic reaction linked to electron transfer to the catalytic site originates from charge transfer within the K pathway, which presumably facilitates reduction of the site.  相似文献   

2.
Oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by molecular oxygen catalysed by cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3) is coupled to translocation of H+ ions across the mitochondrial membrane. The proton pump is an intrinsic property of the cytochrome c oxidase complex as revealed by studies with phospholipid vesicles inlayed with the purified enzyme. As the conformation of cytochrome aa3 is specifically sensitive to the electrochemical proton gradient across the mitochondrial membrane, it is likely that redox energy is primarily conserved as a conformational "strain" in the cytochrome aa3 complex, followed by relaxation linked to proton translocation. Similar principles of energy conservation and transduction may apply on other respiratory chain complexes and on mitochondrial ATP synthase.  相似文献   

3.
Transmembrane electrochemical proton gradients are used to store free energy in biological systems, and to drive the synthesis of biomolecules and transmembrane transport. These gradients are maintained by membrane-bound proton transporters that employ free energy provided by, for example, electron transfer or light. In recent years, the structures of several membrane proteins involved in proton translocation have been determined, and indicate that both protein-bound water molecules and protonatable amino acid residues play central roles in transmembrane proton conduction. From these structures, in combination with functional studies, have emerged general principles of proton transfer across membranes and control mechanisms for such reactions, in particular with regard to the electron-transfer-driven proton pump cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

4.
Proton translocation in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) proceeds sequentially in a four-stroke manner. Every electron donated by cytochrome c drives the enzyme from one of four relatively stable intermediates to another, and each of these transitions is coupled to proton translocation across the membrane, and to uptake of another proton for production of water in the catalytic site. Using cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans we have studied the kinetics of electron transfer and electric potential generation during several such transitions, two of which are reported here. The extent of electric potential generation during initial electron equilibration between CuA and heme a confirms that this reaction is not kinetically linked to vectorial proton transfer, whereas oxidation of heme a is kinetically coupled to the main proton translocation events during functioning of the proton pump. We find that the rates and amplitudes in multiphase heme a oxidation are different in the OH-->EH and PM-->F steps of the catalytic cycle, and that this is reflected in the kinetics of electric potential generation. We discuss this difference in terms of different driving forces and relate our results, and data from the literature, to proposed mechanisms of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

5.
Evidence is available showing that the coupling efficiency of the proton pump in cytochrome c oxidase of mitochondria can under certain conditions decrease significantly below the maximum attainable value. The view is developed that slips in the proton pump of cytochrome c oxidase represent an intrinsic switch mechanism which regulates the relative contribution of energy transfer and respiratory protection against oxygen toxicity by the oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
Lancaster CR 《FEBS letters》2003,545(1):52-60
Electrostatic interactions play a key role in the coupling of electron and proton transfer in membrane protein complexes during the conversion of the energy stored in sunlight or reduced substrates into biochemical energy via a transmembrane electrochemical proton potential. Principles of charge stabilization within membrane proteins are reviewed and discussed for photosynthetic reaction centers, cytochrome c oxidases, and diheme-containing quinol:fumarate reductases. The impact of X-ray structure-based electrostatic calculations on the functional interpretation of these structural coordinates, on providing new explanations for experimental observations, and for the design of more focused additional experiments is illustrated by a number of key examples.  相似文献   

7.
In mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain where it catalyses the reduction of oxygen to water. The free energy released in this process is used to translocate (pump) protons across the membrane such that each electron transfer to the catalytic site is accompanied by proton pumping. To investigate the mechanism of electron-proton coupling in cytochrome c oxidase we have studied the pH-dependence of the kinetic deuterium isotope effect of specific reaction steps associated with proton transfer in wild-type and structural variants of cytochrome c oxidases in which amino-acid residues in proton-transfer pathways have been modified. In addition, we have solved the structure of one of these mutant enzymes, where a key component of the proton-transfer machinery, Glu286, was modified to an Asp. The results indicate that the P3-->F3 transition rate is determined by a direct proton-transfer event to the catalytic site. In contrast, the rate of the F3-->O4 transition, which involves simultaneous electron transfer to the catalytic site and is characteristic of any transition during CytcO turnover, is determined by two events with similar rates and different kinetic isotope effects. These reaction steps involve transfer of protons, that are pumped, via a segment of the protein including Glu286 and Arg481.  相似文献   

8.
Using a combination of stopped-flow spectrophotometric proton pumping measurements and time-resolved potential measurements on black lipid membranes, we have investigated the effect of Zn(2+) ions on the proton transfer properties of Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase. When zinc was enclosed in the interior of cytochrome c oxidase containing liposomes, the H/e stoichiometry was found to gradually decrease with increasing Zn(2+) concentration. Half-inhibition of proton pumping was observed at [Zn(2+)](i)=75 microM corresponding to about 5-6 Zn(2+) ions per oxidase molecule. In addition, there was a significant increase in the respiratory control ratio of the proteoliposomes upon incorporation of Zn(2+). Time-resolved potential measurements on a black lipid membrane showed that the electrogenic phases slowed down in the presence of Zn(2+) correspond to phases that have been attributed to proton uptake from the cytoplasmic side and to proton pumping. We conclude that Zn(2+) ions bind close to or within the two proton transfer pathways of the bacterial cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

9.
In at least one component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, cytochrome c oxidase, exothermic electron transfer reactions are used to drive vectorial proton transport against an electrochemical hydrogen ion gradient across the mitochondrial inner membrane. The role of the gating of electrons (the regulation of the rates of electron transfer into and out of the proton transport site) in this coupling between electron transfer and proton pumping has been explored. The approach involves the solution of the steady-state rate equations pertinent to proton pump models which include, to various degrees, the uncoupled (i.e., not linked to proton pumping) electron transfer processes which are likely to occur in any real electron transfer-driven proton pump. This analysis furnishes a quantitative framework for examining the effects of variations in proton binding site pKas and metal center reduction potentials, the relationship between energy conservation efficiency and turnover rate, the conditions for maximum power output or minimum heat production, and required efficiency of the gating of electrons. Some novel conclusions emerge from the analysis, including: An efficient electron transfer-driven proton pump need not exhibit a pH-dependent reduction potential; Very efficient gating of electrons is required for efficient electron transfer driven proton pumping, especially when a reasonable correlation of electron transfer rate and electron transfer exoergonicity is assumed; and A consideration of the importance and possible mechanisms of the gating of electrons suggests that efficient proton pumping by CuA in cytochrome oxidase could, in principle, take place with structural changes confined to the immediate vicinity of the copper ion, while proton pumping by Fea would probably require conformational coupling between the iron and more remote structures in the enzyme. The conclusions are discussed with reference to proton pumping by cytochrome c oxidase, and some possible implications for oxidative phosphorylation are noted.  相似文献   

10.
Cytochrome c oxidase is an efficient energy transducer that reduces oxygen to water and converts the released chemical energy into an electrochemical membrane potential. As a true proton pump, cytochrome c oxidase translocates protons across the membrane against this potential. Based on a wealth of experiments and calculations, an increasingly detailed picture of the reaction intermediates in the redox cycle has emerged. However, the fundamental mechanism of proton pumping coupled to redox chemistry remains largely unresolved. Here we examine and extend a kinetic master-equation approach to gain insight into redox-coupled proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase. Basic principles of the cytochrome c oxidase proton pump emerge from an analysis of the simplest kinetic models that retain essential elements of the experimentally determined structure, energetics, and kinetics, and that satisfy fundamental physical principles. The master-equation models allow us to address the question of how pumping can be achieved in a system in which all reaction steps are reversible. Whereas proton pumping does not require the direct modulation of microscopic reaction barriers, such kinetic gating greatly increases the pumping efficiency. Further efficiency gains can be achieved by partially decoupling the proton uptake pathway from the active-site region. Such a mechanism is consistent with the proposed Glu valve, in which the side chain of a key glutamic acid shuttles between the D channel and the active-site region. We also show that the models predict only small proton leaks even in the absence of turnover. The design principles identified here for cytochrome c oxidase provide a blueprint for novel biology-inspired fuel cells, and the master-equation formulation should prove useful also for other molecular machines. .  相似文献   

11.
The cytochrome bc(1) complex catalyzes electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c by a protonmotive Q cycle mechanism in which electron transfer is linked to proton translocation across the inner mitochondrial membrane. In the Q cycle mechanism proton translocation is the net result of topographically segregated reduction of quinone and reoxidation of quinol on opposite sides of the membrane, with protons being carried across the membrane as hydrogens on the quinol. The linkage of proton chemistry to electron transfer during quinol oxidation and quinone reduction requires pathways for moving protons to and from the aqueous phase and the hydrophobic environment in which the quinol and quinone redox reactions occur. Crystal structures of the mitochondrial cytochrome bc(1) complexes in various conformations allow insight into possible proton conduction pathways. In this review we discuss pathways for proton conduction linked to ubiquinone redox reactions with particular reference to recently determined structures of the yeast bc(1) complex.  相似文献   

12.
The existence of a proton pump associated with bovine cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) has over the last few years been a matter of considerable dispute. In an attempt to resolve some of the problems with the measuring system we have synthesized fluorescein-phosphatidylethanolamine which when reconstituted with cytochrome c oxidase into phospholipid vesicles provided a reliable indicator of the intravesicular pH. It was observed that cytochrome c oxidase catalyzed the abstraction of almost 2 protons from the intravesicular medium/molecule of ferrocytochrome c oxidized. In parallel experiments whereby the extravesicular pH was measured with an electrode it was found that the enzyme appeared to be responsible for the appearance of almost 1.0 proton/molecule of ferrocytochrome c oxidized. Taken together these data unequivocally demonstrate that cytochrome c oxidase behaves as a proton pump. Furthermore, the other proton which was abstracted is believed to be used for the process of the reduction of oxygen. Similar experiments were performed with a cytochrome c oxidase preparation which was devoid of subunit III. Under these circumstances the enzyme appeared to be unable to translocate protons across the vesicular membrane but was competent to abstract protons from the intravesicular medium for the reduction of oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
Cooperative linkage of solute binding at separate binding sites in allosteric proteins is an important functional attribute of soluble and membrane bound hemoproteins. Analysis of proton/electron coupling at the four redox centers, i.e. Cu(A), heme a, heme a(3) and Cu(B), in the purified bovine cytochrome c oxidase in the unliganded, CO-liganded and CN-liganded states is presented. These studies are based on direct measurement of scalar proton translocation associated with oxido-reduction of the metal centers and pH dependence of the midpoint potential of the redox centers. Heme a (and Cu(A)) exhibits a cooperative proton/electron linkage (Bohr effect). Bohr effect seems also to be associated with the oxygen-reduction chemistry at the heme a(3)-Cu(B) binuclear center. Data on electron transfer in cytochrome c oxidase are also presented, which, together with structural data, provide evidence showing the occurrence of direct electron transfer from Cu(A) to the binuclear center in addition to electron transfer via heme a. A survey of structural and functional data showing the essential role of cooperative proton/electron linkage at heme a in the proton pump of cytochrome c oxidase is presented. On the basis of this and related functional and structural information, variants for cooperative mechanisms in the proton pump of the oxidase are examined.  相似文献   

14.
Kristina Faxén 《BBA》2007,1767(5):381-386
Cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal enzyme in the respiratory chains of mitochondria and many bacteria where it translocates protons across a membrane thereby maintaining an electrochemical proton gradient. Results from earlier studies on detergent-solubilized cytochrome c oxidase have shown that individual reaction steps associated with proton pumping display pH-dependent kinetics. Here, we investigated the effect of pH on the kinetics of these reaction steps with membrane-reconstituted cytochrome c oxidase such that the pH was adjusted to different values on the inside and outside of the membrane. The results show that the pH on the inside of the membrane fully determines the kinetics of internal electron transfers that are linked to proton pumping. Thus, even though proton release is rate limiting for these reaction steps (Salomonsson et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 2005, 102, 17624), the transition kinetics is insensitive to the outside pH (in the range 6-9.5).  相似文献   

15.
One of the key problems of molecular bioenergetics is the understanding of the function of redox-driven proton pumps on a molecular level. One such class of proton pumps are the heme-copper oxidases. These enzymes are integral membrane proteins in which proton translocation across the membrane is driven by electron transfer from a low-potential donor, such as, e.g. cytochrome c, to a high-potential acceptor, O(2). Proton pumping is associated with distinct exergonic reaction steps that involve gradual reduction of oxygen to water. During the process of O(2) reduction, unprotonated high pK(a) proton acceptors are created at the catalytic site. Initially, these proton acceptors become protonated as a result of intramolecular proton transfer from a residue(s) located in the membrane-spanning part of the enzyme, but removed from the catalytic site. This residue is then reprotonated from the bulk solution. In cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the proton is initially transferred from a glutamate, E(I-286), which has an apparent pK(a) of 9.4. According to a recently published structure of the enzyme, the deprotonation of E(I-286) is likely to result in minor structural changes that propagate to protonatable groups on the proton output (positive) side of the protein. We propose that in this way, the free energy available from the O(2) reduction is conserved during the proton transfer. On the basis of the observation of these structural changes, a possible proton-pumping model is presented in this paper. Initially, the structural changes associated with deprotonation of E(I-286) result in the transfer of a proton to an acceptor for pumped protons from the input (negative) side of the membrane. After reprotonation of E(I-286) this acceptor releases a proton to the output side of the membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of detergents on electron and proton transfer in bovine cytochrome c oxidase was studied using steady-state and transient-state methods. Cytochrome c oxidase in lauryl maltoside has high maximal turnover (TN(max)=400 s(-1)), whereas activity is low (TN(max)=10 s(-1)) in Triton X-100. Single turnover studies of intramolecular electron transfer show similar rates in either detergent. Transient proton uptake experiments show the oxidase in lauryl maltoside consumes 1.8+/-0.3 H(+)/aa(3) during either partial reduction of the oxidase or reaction of fully reduced enzyme with O(2). However, the oxidase in Triton X-100 consumes 2.6+/-0.4 H(+)/aa(3) during partial reduction and 1.0+/-0.2 H(+)/aa(3) in the O(2) reaction. Absorption spectra recorded during turnover show that the enzyme undergoes activation in lauryl maltoside, but does not activate in Triton X-100. We propose that cytochrome c oxidase in different detergents allows access to different sites of protonation, which in turn influences steady-state activity.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome c oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme, which catalyses the one-electron oxidation of four molecules of cytochrome c and the four-electron reduction of O(2) to water. Electron transfer through the enzyme is coupled to proton pumping across the membrane. Protons that are pumped as well as those that are used for O(2) reduction are transferred though a specific intraprotein (D) pathway. Results from earlier studies have shown that replacement of residue Asn139 by an Asp, at the beginning of the D pathway, results in blocking proton pumping without slowing uptake of substrate protons used for O(2) reduction. Furthermore, introduction of the acidic residue results in an increase of the apparent pK(a) of E286, an internal proton donor to the catalytic site, from 9.4 to ~11. In this study we have investigated intramolecular electron and proton transfer in a mutant cytochrome c oxidase in which a neutral residue, Thr, was introduced at the 139 site. The mutation results in uncoupling of proton pumping from O(2) reduction, but a decrease in the apparent pK(a) of E286 from 9.4 to 7.6. The data provide insights into the mechanism by which cytochrome c oxidase pumps protons and the structural elements involved in this process.  相似文献   

18.
A low static dielectric permittivity of proteins causes the low reorganization energies for the charge transfer reactions inside them. This reorganization energy does not depend on the pre-existing intraprotein electric field. The charge transferred inside the protein interacts with its aqueous surroundings; for many globular proteins, the effect of this surroundings on the reorganization energy is comparable with the effect of reorganization of the protein itself while for the charge transfer in the middle of membrane the aqueous phase plays a minor role. Reorganization energy depends strongly on the system considered, and hence there is no sense to speak on the "protein reorganization energy" as some permanent characteristic parameter. We employed a simple algorithm for calculation of the medium reorganization energy using the numerical solution of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation. Namely, the reaction field energy was computed in two versions - all media having optical dielectric permittivity, and all the media with the static one; the difference of these two quantities gives the reorganization energy. We have calculated reorganization energies for electron transfer in cytochrome c, various ammine-ruthenated cytochromes c, azurin, ferredoxin, cytochrome c oxidase, complex of methylamine dehydrogenase with amicyanin, and for proton transfer in α-chymotrypsin. It is shown that calculation of the medium reorganization energy can be a useful tool in analysis of the mechanisms of the charge transfer reactions in proteins.  相似文献   

19.
In this paper, the mechanism of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase is examined. Data on cooperative linkage of vectorial proton translocation to oxido-reduction of Cu(A) and heme a in the CO-inhibited, liposome-reconstituted bovine cytochrome c oxidase are reviewed. Results on proton translocation associated to single-turnover oxido-reduction of the four metal centers in the unliganded, membrane-reconstituted oxidase are also presented. On the basis of these results, X-ray crystallographic structures and spectrometric data for a proton pumping model in cytochrome c oxidase is proposed. This model, which is specifically derived from data available for the bovine cytochrome c oxidase, is intended to illustrate the essential features of cooperative coupling of proton translocation at the low potential redox site. Variants will have to be introduced for those members of the heme copper oxidase family which differ in the redox components of the low potential site and in the amino acid network connected to this site. The model we present describes in detail steps of cooperative coupling of proton pumping at the low potential Cu(A)-heme a site in the bovine enzyme. It is then outlined how this cooperative proton transfer can be thermodynamically and kinetically coupled to the chemistry of oxygen reduction to water at the high potential Cu(B)-heme a(3) center, so as to result in proton pumping, in the turning-over enzyme, against a transmembrane electrochemical proton gradient of some 250 mV.  相似文献   

20.
A direct kinetic analysis is presented of rapid proton-releasing reactions at the outer or C-side of the membrane, in ox heart and rat liver mitochondria, associated with aerobic oxidation of reduced terminal respiratory carriers in the presence of antimycin. Valinomycin plus K+ enhances the rate of cytochrome c oxidation and the rate and extent of H+ release. In the presence of valinomycin the leads to H+/e- ratio, computed on the basis of total electron flow from respiratory carriers to oxygen, varies with pH, remaining always lower than 1, and is unaffected by N-ethylmaleimide. 2-Heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide and 5-(n-undecyl)-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole, at concentrations which inhibit in the presence of antimycin the oxygen-induced reduction of b cytochromes, cause also a marked depression of the H+ release associated with aerobic oxidation of terminal respiratory carriers. Aerobic oxidation of the cytochrome system in mitochondria and of isolated b-c1 complex and cytochrome c oxidase results in scalar proton release from ionizable groups (redox Bohr effects). In mitochondria and submitochondrial particles, about 70% of the oxidoreductions of the components of the cytochrome system are linked to scalar proton transfer by ionizable groups. In isolated b-c1 complex scalar proton transfer, resulting from redox Bohr effect, amounts to 0.9H+ per Fe-S protein (190 muT). In isolated cytochrome c oxidase, Bohr protons amount to 0.8 per haem a + a3. The results presented indicate that the H+ release from mitochondria during oxidation of terminal respiratory carriers derives from residual antimycin-insensitive electron flow in the quinone-cytochrome c span and from redox Bohr effects in the b-c1 complex and cytochrome c oxidase. There is no sign of proton pumping by cytochrome oxidase during its transition from the reduced to the active 'pulsed' state and the first one or two turnovers.  相似文献   

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