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1.
The mechanism of proton pumping by cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Cytochrome c oxidase catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water that is accompanied by pumping of four protons across the mitochondrial or bacterial membrane. Triggered by the results of recent x-ray crystallographic analyses, published data concerning the coupling of individual electron transfer steps to proton pumping are reanalyzed: Conversion of the conventional oxoferryl intermediate F to the fully oxidized form O is connected to pumping of only one proton. Most likely one proton is already pumped during the double reduction of O, and only three protons during conversion of the “peroxy” forms P to O via the oxoferryl form F. Based on the available structural, spectroscopic, and mutagenesis data, a detailed mechanistic model, carefully considering electrostatic interactions, is presented. In this model, each of the four reductions of heme a during the catalytic cycle is coupled to the uptake of one proton via the D-pathway. These protons, but never more than two, are temporarily stored in the regions of the heme a and a3 propionates and are driven to the outside (“pumped”) by electrostatic repulsion from protons entering the active site during turnover. The first proton is pumped by uptake of one proton via the K-pathway during reduction, the second and third proton during the P → F transition when the D-pathway and the active site become directly connected, and the fourth one upon conversion of F to O. Atomic structures are assigned to each intermediate including F′ with an alternative route to O.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain and couples energetically the reduction of oxygen to water to proton pumping across the membrane. The results from previous studies showed that proton pumping can be uncoupled from the O2-reduction reaction by replacement of one single residue, Asn-139 by Asp (N139D), located approximately 30 A from the catalytic site, in the D-proton pathway. The uncoupling was correlated with an increase in the pK(a) of an internal proton donor, Glu-286, from approximately 9.4 to >11. Here, we show that replacement of the acidic residue, Asp-132 by Asn in the N139D CcO (D132N/N139D double-mutant CcO) results in restoration of the Glu-286 pK(a) to the original value and recoupling of the proton pump during steady-state turnover. Furthermore, a kinetic investigation of the specific reaction steps in the D132N/N139D double-mutant CcO showed that proton pumping is sustained even if proton uptake from solution, through the D-pathway, is slowed. However, during single-turnover oxidation of the fully reduced CcO the P --> F transition, which does not involve electron transfer to the catalytic site, was not coupled to proton pumping. The results provide insights into the mechanism of proton pumping by CcO and the structural elements involved in this process.  相似文献   

3.
4.
In mitochondria and aerobic bacteria energy conservation involves electron transfer through a number of membrane-bound protein complexes to O2. The reduction of O2, accompanied by the uptake of substrate protons to form H2O, is catalyzed by cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). This reaction is coupled to proton translocation (pumping) across the membrane such that each electron transfer to the catalytic site is linked to the uptake of two protons from one side and the release of one proton to the other side of the membrane. To address the mechanism of vectorial proton translocation, in this study we have investigated the solvent deuterium isotope effect of proton-transfer rates in CcO oriented in small unilamellar vesicles. Although in H2O the uptake and release reactions occur with the same rates, in D2O the substrate and pumped protons are taken up first (tau(D) congruent with 200 micros, "peroxy" to "ferryl" transition) followed by a significantly slower proton release to the other side of the membrane (tau(D) congruent with 1 ms). Thus, the results define the order and timing of the proton transfers during a pumping cycle. Furthermore, the results indicate that during CcO turnover internal electron transfer to the catalytic site is controlled by the release of the pumped proton, which suggests a mechanism by which CcO orchestrates a tight coupling between electron transfer and proton translocation.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular oxygen acts as the terminal electron sink in the respiratory chains of aerobic organisms. Cytochrome c oxidase in the inner membrane of mitochondria and the plasma membrane of bacteria catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water, and couples the free energy of the reaction to proton pumping across the membrane. The proton-pumping activity contributes to the proton electrochemical gradient, which drives the synthesis of ATP. Based on kinetic experiments on the O–O bond splitting transition of the catalytic cycle (A → PR), it has been proposed that the electron transfer to the binuclear iron–copper center of O2 reduction initiates the proton pump mechanism. This key electron transfer event is coupled to an internal proton transfer from a conserved glutamic acid to the proton-loading site of the pump. However, the proton may instead be transferred to the binuclear center to complete the oxygen reduction chemistry, which would constitute a short-circuit. Based on atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of cytochrome c oxidase in an explicit membrane–solvent environment, complemented by related free-energy calculations, we propose that this short-circuit is effectively prevented by a redox-state–dependent organization of water molecules within the protein structure that gates the proton transfer pathway.Life on Earth is supported by a constant supply of energy in the form of ATP. Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) in the respiratory chains of mitochondria and bacteria catalyzes the exergonic reduction of molecular oxygen (O2) to water and uses the free energy of the reaction to pump protons across the membrane (13). The oxygen reduction reaction takes place at a highly conserved active site formed by two metal sites, heme a3 and CuB (Fig. 1 A and B), called the binuclear center (BNC). The electrons donated by the mobile electron carrier cytochrome c reach the BNC via two other conserved metal centers, CuA and heme a (Fig. 1A). The protons required for the chemistry of O2 reduction to water, and for proton pumping, are transported with the assistance of side chains of polar amino acids and conserved water molecules in the protein interior (46) (Fig. 1A). Two such proton transfer pathways have been described in the mitochondrial and bacterial A-type oxidases (to distinguish between different types of oxidases, see ref. 7), namely, the D and K channels (8, 9), the names of which are based on the conserved amino acid residues Asp91 and Lys319, respectively (Fig. 1A, amino acid numbering based on the bovine heart CcO). The D channel is responsible for the translocation of all of the pumped protons, and for the transfer of at least two of the four protons required for oxygen reduction chemistry, whereas the K channel supplies one or two protons to the BNC during the reductive phase of the catalytic cycle (8, 9). The D channel terminates at a highly conserved glutamic acid residue, Glu242, from where the protons are either transferred to the BNC for consumption, or to the proton-loading site (PLS) for pumping across the membrane (Fig. 1A). In 2003, Wikström et al. postulated a molecular mechanism in which water molecules in the nonpolar cavity above Glu242 would form proton-transferring chains, the orientation of which depends upon the redox state of the enzyme (10). They proposed that the reduction of the low-spin heme would result in transfer of a proton via a preorganized water chain from Glu242 to the d-propionate (Dprp) of the high-spin heme, whereas in the case when the electron has moved to the BNC, the water chain would reorientate and conduct protons from Glu242 to the BNC (Fig. 1A, and see below). Even though there is little direct experimental support available for such a water-gated mechanism, a recent FTIR study indeed suggests changes in water organization upon changes in the redox state of the enzyme (11). Many of the elementary steps that were postulated in the water-gated mechanism have gained support from experiments in the recent past (12, 13).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.(A) A three-subunit (SU) CcO. SU I (blue), II (red), and III (orange) are displayed as transparent ribbons. The D and K channels of proton transfer are marked with blue arrows. Crystallographic water molecules present in these proton channels are shown in purple. Electron transfer (red arrow) takes place from CuA (orange) via heme a (yellow) to the binuclear center comprising heme a3 (yellow)–CuB (orange). Protons are transferred from Glu242 (E242) either to the PLS or to the binuclear center (black arrows). Lipid bilayer (silver lines), water (gray dots), and sodium (light yellow) and chloride (cyan) ions are also displayed. (B) The catalytic cycle of CcO. The states of heme a3, CuB, and the cross-linked tyrosine are displayed. Each light orange rectangle corresponds to a state of the BNC, the name of which is displayed in red (Upper Right). Pumped protons are shown in blue, black H+ indicates uptake of a proton for water formation, and e indicates transfer of an electron from the low-spin heme a. Catalysis of O2 reduction occurs clockwise.It is generally thought that the proton pump of CcO operates via the same mechanism in each of the 4 one-electron reduction steps of the catalytic cycle (Fig. 1B). However, kinetic data on two different transitions (A → PR and OH → EH) have suggested dissimilarities in some of the elementary steps (12, 13). Fully reduced enzyme reacts with oxygen and forms an oxygenated adduct A in ca. 10 µs, followed by splitting of the O–O bond leading to formation of the PR intermediate (in ∼25 μs) that is linked to loading of the PLS with a proton (3, 12). O–O bond splitting from state A in the absence of electrons in heme a or CuA yields the stable state PM without proton transfer to the PLS (3, 12). Therefore, it is the electron transfer from heme a into the BNC accompanying O–O bond scission during A → PR that is linked to the proton transfer to the PLS. The structure of the PR intermediate is well characterized with ferryl heme a3, cupric hydroxide, and tyrosinate (3, 14). In PM the tyrosine is almost certainly in the form of a neutral radical (3, 14), so the reaction PM → PR is a proton-coupled electron transfer reaction (PCET) that initiates the reactions of the proton pump (3, 12). Note that in the state PR the proton at the PLS partially neutralizes the electron in the BNC (3) in accordance with the charge-neutralization principle of the BNC (15). However, an important question arises: how can proton transfer from Glu242 to the BNC be prevented, which would short-circuit one step of proton pumping and form the next stable intermediate F? In the OH → EH transition of the catalytic cycle this short-circuit is minimized because reduction of the low-spin heme is thought to raise the pKa of the PLS sufficiently to lead to its protonation before transfer of the electron to the BNC (3, 10, 13, 1618), and uncompensated proton transfer to the BNC is endergonic in nature (refs. 13,16,17; cf. ref. 19). In contrast, the likelihood of a proton leak in the A → PR transition increases manifold because the electron transfer from heme a to the BNC is required for loading of the PLS with a proton (3, 12). This facet is analyzed in the current work, and it is proposed that it is the orientation of the water molecules in the nonpolar cavity above Glu242 that effectively gates the pump and minimizes such a short-circuit.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain that is responsible for biological energy conversion in mitochondria and aerobic bacteria. The membrane-bound enzyme converts free energy from oxygen reduction to an electrochemical proton gradient by functioning as a redox-coupled proton pump. Although the 3D structure and functional studies have revealed proton conducting pathways in the enzyme interior, the location of proton donor and acceptor groups are not fully identified. We show here by time-resolved optical and FTIR spectroscopy combined with time-resolved electrometry that some mutant enzymes incapable of proton pumping nevertheless initiate catalysis by proton transfer to a proton-loading site. A conserved tyrosine in the so-called D-channel is identified as a potential proton donor that determines the efficiency of this reaction.  相似文献   

7.
Proton transfer across biological membranes underpins central processes in biological systems, such as energy conservation and transport of ions and molecules. In the membrane proteins involved in these processes, proton transfer takes place through specific pathways connecting the two sides of the membrane via control elements within the protein. It is commonly believed that acidic residues are required near the orifice of such proton pathways to facilitate proton uptake. In cytochrome c oxidase, one such pathway starts near a conserved Asp-132 residue. Results from earlier studies have shown that replacement of Asp-132 by, e.g., Asn, slows proton uptake by a factor of ∼5,000. Here, we show that proton uptake at full speed (∼104 s−1) can be restored in the Asp-132–Asn oxidase upon introduction of a second structural modification further inside the pathway (Asn-139–Thr) without compensating for the loss of the negative charge. This proton-uptake rate was insensitive to Zn2+ addition, which in the wild-type cytochrome c oxidase slows the reaction, indicating that Asp-132 is required for Zn2+ binding. Furthermore, in the absence of Asp-132 and with Thr at position 139, at high pH (>9), proton uptake was significantly accelerated. Thus, the data indicate that Asp-132 is not strictly required for maintaining rapid proton uptake. Furthermore, despite the rapid proton uptake in the Asn-139–Thr/Asp-132–Asn mutant cytochrome c oxidase, proton pumping was impaired, which indicates that the segment around these residues is functionally linked to pumping.  相似文献   

8.
The proton donor for O-O bond scission by cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cytochrome c oxidase is the main catalyst of oxygen consumption in mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria. The key step in oxygen reduction is scission of the O-O bond and formation of an intermediate P(R) of the binuclear active site composed of heme a(3) and Cu(B). The donor of the proton required for this reaction has been suggested to be a unique tyrosine residue (Tyr-280) covalently cross-linked to one of the histidine ligands of Cu(B). To test this idea we used the Glu-278-Gln mutant enzyme from Paracoccus denitrificans, in which the reaction with oxygen stops at the P(R) intermediate. Three different time-resolved techniques were used. Optical spectroscopy showed fast (approximately 60 micros) appearance of the P(R) species along with full oxidation of heme a, and FTIR spectroscopy revealed a band at 1,308 cm(-1), which is characteristic for the deprotonated form of the cross-linked Tyr-280. The development of electric potential during formation of the P(R) species suggests transfer of a proton over a distance of approximately 4 A perpendicular to the membrane plane, which is close to the distance between the oxygen atom of the hydroxyl group of Tyr-280 and the bound oxygen. These results strongly support the hypothesis that the cross-linked tyrosine is the proton donor for O-O bond cleavage by cytochrome c oxidase and strengthens the view that this tyrosine also provides the fourth electron in O(2) reduction in conditions where heme a is oxidized.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Possible proton relay pathways in cytochrome c oxidase.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
As the final electron acceptor in the respiratory chain of eukaryotic and many prokaryotic organisms, cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water and generates a proton gradient. To test for proton pathways through the oxidase, site-directed mutagenesis was applied to subunit I of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzyme. Mutants were characterized in three highly conserved regions of the peptide, comprising possible proton loading, unloading, and transfer sites: an interior loop between helices II and III (Asp132Asn/Ala), an exterior loop between helices IX and X (His411Ala, Asp412Asn, Thr413Asn, Tyr414Phe), and the predicted transmembrane helix VIII (Thr352Ala, Pro358Ala, Thr359Ala, Lys362Met). Most of the mutants had lower activity than wild type, but only mutants at residue 132 lost proton pumping while retaining electron transfer activity. Although electron transfer was substantially inhibited, no major structural alteration appears to have occurred in D132 mutants, since resonance Raman and visible absorbance spectra were normal. However, lower CO binding (70-85% of wild type) suggests some minor change to the binuclear center. In addition, the activity of the reconstituted Asp132 mutants was inhibited rather than stimulated by ionophores or uncoupler. The inhibition was not observed with the purified enzyme and a direct pH effect was ruled out, suggesting an altered response to the electrical or pH gradient. The results support an important role for the conserved II-III loop in the proton pumping process and are consistent with the possibility of involvement of residues in helix VIII and the IX-X loop.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain, reduces oxygen to water and uses the released energy to pump protons across a membrane. Here, we use kinetic master equations to explore the energetic and kinetic control of proton pumping in CcO. We construct models consistent with thermodynamic principles, the structure of CcO, experimentally known proton affinities, and equilibrium constants of intermediate reactions. The resulting models are found to capture key properties of CcO, including the midpoint redox potentials of the metal centers and the electron transfer rates. We find that coarse-grained models with two proton sites and one electron site can pump one proton per electron against membrane potentials exceeding 100 mV. The high pumping efficiency of these models requires strong electrostatic couplings between the proton loading (pump) site and the electron site (heme a), and kinetic gating of the internal proton transfer. Gating is achieved by enhancing the rate of proton transfer from the conserved Glu-242 to the pump site on reduction of heme a, consistent with the predictions of the water-gated model of proton pumping. The model also accounts for the phenotype of D-channel mutations associated with loss of pumping but retained turnover. The fundamental mechanism identified here for the efficient conversion of chemical energy into an electrochemical potential should prove relevant also for other molecular machines and novel fuel-cell designs.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome c oxidase transfers electrons and protons for dioxygen reduction coupled with proton pumping. These electron and proton transfers are tightly coupled with each other for the effective energy transduction by various unknown mechanisms. Here, we report a coupling mechanism by a histidine (His-503) at the entrance of a proton transfer pathway to the dioxygen reduction site (D-pathway) of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. In the reduced state, a water molecule is fixed by hydrogen bonds between His-503 and Asp-91 of the D-pathway and is linked via two water arrays extending to the molecular surface. The microenvironment of Asp-91 appears in the x-ray structure to have a proton affinity as high as that of His-503. Thus, Asp-91 and His-503 cooperatively trap, on the fixed water molecule, the proton that is transferred through the water arrays from the molecular surface. On oxidation, the His-503 imidazole plane rotates by 180 degrees to break the hydrogen bond to the protonated water and releases the proton to Asp-91. On reduction, Asp-91 donates the proton to the dioxygen reduction site through the D-pathway. The proton collection controlled by His-503 was confirmed by partial electron transfer inhibition by binding of Zn2+ and Cd2+ to His-503 in the x-ray structures. The estimated Kd for Zn2+ binding to His-503 in the x-ray structure is consistent with the reported Kd for complete proton-pumping inhibition by Zn2+ [Kannt A, Ostermann T, Muller H, Ruitenberg M (2001) FEBS Lett 503:142-146]. These results suggest that His-503 couples the proton transfer for dioxygen reduction with the proton pumping.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of oxidation of reduced cytochrome c by cytochrome c oxidase reconstituted into unilamellar vesicles (COV) has been followed by stopped-flow method in the time range 3 msec-1 sec. In the presence of valinomycin, the oxidation of cytochrome c is linked to proton ejection in the external medium, with an apparent stoichiometry (H+/e-) of 0.93 +/- 0.22, under conditions in which the enzyme is in the more active "pulsed" state (i.e., having undergone oxidation-reduction cycles). The time course of reaction indicates that the conformational change(s) involved in coupling the redox reaction to proton translocation is fast. Similar experiments carried out with cytochrome c oxidase depleted of subunit III show that proton-pumping is maintained, although with a lower efficiency (H+/e- = 0.5). The number of protons ejected per electron appears to be correlated to the value of the respiratory control ratio; although this result is partly due to an increase in the rate of diffusion back into the vesicles, a relationship between the respiratory control ratio and the efficiency of the proton pump may be inferred, suggesting a control of the H+/e-ratio.  相似文献   

14.
In the respiratory chain free energy is conserved by linking the chemical reduction of dioxygen to the electrogenic translocation of protons across a membrane. Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is one of the sites where this linkage occurs. Although intensively studied, the molecular mechanism of proton pumping by this enzyme remains unknown. Here, we present data from an investigation of a mutant CcO from Rhodobacter sphaeroides [Asn-139 --> Asp, ND(I-139)] in which proton pumping is completely uncoupled from the catalytic turnover (i.e., reduction of O2). However, in this mutant CcO, the rate by which O2 is reduced to H2O is even slightly higher than that of the wild-type CcO. The data indicate that the disabling of the proton pump is a result of a perturbation of E(I-286), which is located 20 A from N(I-139) and is an internal proton donor to the catalytic site, located in the membrane-spanning part of CcO. The mutation results in raising the effective pKa of E(I-286) by 1.6 pH units. An explanation of how the mutation uncouples catalytic turnover from proton pumping is offered, which suggests a mechanism by which CcO pumps protons.  相似文献   

15.
Gaining a detailed understanding of the proton-pumping process in cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is one of the challenges of modern biophysics. Recent mutation experiments have highlighted this challenge by showing that a single mutation (the N139D mutation) blocks the overall pumping while continuing to channel protons to the binuclear center without inhibiting the oxidase activity. Rationalizing this result has been a major problem because the mutation is quite far from E286, which is believed to serve as the branching point for the proton transport in the pumping process. In the absence of a reasonable explanation for this important observation, we have developed a Monte Carlo simulation method that can convert mutation and structural information to pathways for proton translocation and simulate the pumping process in COX on a millisecond and even subsecond time scale. This tool allows us to reproduce and propose a possible explanation to the effect of the N139D mutation and to offer a consistent model for the origin of the "valve effect" in COX, which is crucial for maintaining uphill proton pumping. Furthermore, obtaining the first structure-based simulation of proton pumping in COX, or in any other protein, indicates that our approach should provide a powerful tool for verification of mechanistic hypotheses about the action of proton transport proteins.  相似文献   

16.
The integral mitochondrial membrane protein cytochrome c oxidase (ferrocytochrome-c:oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.9.3.1) was crystallized from solutions of the protein from bovine heart isolated as described earlier [Yoshikawa, S. & Caughey, W. S. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 412-420]. Crystallinity was demonstrated by x-ray diffraction. Microcrystals (tetragonal prisms, 0.02 mm in the largest dimension) were obtained in high yield with retention of activity and contained Fe, Cu, Zn, and Mg in approximate atom ratios of 1.0:1.25:0.5:0.5, respectively. Analysis of the amino acid residues and the tightly bound detergent support an apparent molecular mass of about 200 kDa, of which 150 kDa is protein (1316 +/- 66 amino acids) and 50 kDa is detergent (Brij 35). Seven major polypeptides are evident by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Adjustments in buffer concentration and other conditions have yielded much larger green crystals, hexagonal bipyramids; a crystal 0.3 X 0.5 X 0.7 mm gave x-ray diffractions as high as 8-A resolution and a space group of P6(2) or P6(4), and cell dimensions of a = b = 174.5 A, c = 282.2 A, alpha = beta = 90 degrees, and gamma = 120 degrees were obtained. A reasonable value of 3.1 A3/Da for Vm, the average space per dalton of protein in the crystal, was obtained for the asymmetric unit, which contains four irons and is a dimer of two minimal catalytic units. Cylindrical dimers (80 X 100 A) estimated from two-dimensional electron diffraction studies [Fuller, S. D., Capaldi, R. A. & Henderson, R. (1979) J. Mol. Biol. 134, 305-327] pack well in the crystal lattice with the symmetry of the space group of the crystal. The crystallization procedure developed is useful in purification of the enzyme and shows promise for the production of crystals of sufficiently high order to gain improved structural information from x-ray diffraction.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome c oxidase catalyzes most of the biological oxygen consumption on Earth, a process responsible for energy supply in aerobic organisms. This remarkable membrane-bound enzyme also converts free energy from O(2) reduction to an electrochemical proton gradient by functioning as a redox-linked proton pump. Although the structures of several oxidases are known, the molecular mechanism of redox-linked proton translocation has remained elusive. Here, correlated internal electron and proton transfer reactions were tracked in real time by spectroscopic and electrometric techniques after laser-activated electron injection into the oxidized enzyme. The observed kinetics establish the long-sought reaction sequence of the proton pump mechanism and describe some of its thermodynamic properties. The 10-micros electron transfer to heme a raises the pK(a) of a "pump site," which is loaded by a proton from the inside of the membrane in 150 micros. This loading increases the redox potentials of both hemes a and a(3), which allows electron equilibration between them at the same rate. Then, in 0.8 ms, another proton is transferred from the inside to the heme a(3)/Cu(B) center, and the electron is transferred to Cu(B). Finally, in 2.6 ms, the preloaded proton is released from the pump site to the opposite side of the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The experiments presented in this study address the problem of how the cytoplasmic surface (proton-input side) of cytochrome c oxidase interacts with protons in the bulk. For this purpose, the cytoplasmic surface of the enzyme was labeled with a fluorescein (Flu) molecule covalently bound to Cys223 of subunit III. Using the Flu as a proton-sensitive marker on the surface and OH as a soluble excited-state proton emitter, the dynamics of the acid-base equilibration between the surface and the bulk was measured in the time-resolved domain. The results were analyzed by using a rigorous kinetic analysis that is based on numeric integration of coupled nonliner differential rate equations in which the rate constants are used as adjustable parameters. The analysis of 11 independent measurements, carried out under various initial conditions, indicated that the protonation of the Flu proceeds through multiple pathways involving diffusion-controlled reactions and proton exchange among surface groups. The surface of the protein carries an efficient system made of carboxylate and histidine moieties that are sufficiently close to each other as to form a proton-collecting antenna. It is the passage of protons among these sites that endows cytochrome c oxidase with the capacity to pick up protons from the buffered cytoplasmic matrix within a time frame compatible with the physiological turnover of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Proton translocation in the D-pathway of cytochrome c oxidase has been studied by a combination of classical molecular dynamics and the multistate empirical valence bond methodology. This approach allows for explicit Grotthuss proton hopping between water molecules. According to mutagenesis experiments, the role of proton donor/acceptor along the D-pathway is carried by the highly conserved residue Glu-242. The present multistate empirical valence bond simulations indicate that the protonation/deprotonation state of Glu-242 is strongly coupled to the distance of proton propagation in the D-pathway. The proton was seen to travel the full length of the D-pathway when Glu-242 was deprotonated; however, it was trapped halfway along the path when Glu-242 was protonated. Further investigation in terms of both proton dynamical properties and free energy calculations for the pathway of proton transport provides evidence for a two-step proton transport mechanism in the D-pathway.  相似文献   

20.
The membrane-bound enzyme cytochrome c oxidase is responsible for cell respiration in aerobic organisms and conserves free energy from O2 reduction into an electrochemical proton gradient by coupling the redox reaction to proton-pumping across the membrane. O2 reduction produces water at the bimetallic heme a3/CuB active site next to a hydrophobic cavity deep within the membrane. Water molecules in this cavity have been suggested to play an important role in the proton-pumping mechanism. Here, we show by molecular dynamics simulations that the conserved arginine/heme a3 delta-propionate ion pair provides a gate, which exhibits reversible thermal opening that is governed by the redox state and the water molecules in the cavity. An important role of this gate in the proton-pumping mechanism is supported by site-directed mutagenesis experiments. Transport of the product water out of the enzyme must be rigidly controlled to prevent water-mediated proton leaks that could compromise the proton-pumping function. Exit of product water is observed through the same arginine/propionate gate, which provides an explanation for the observed extraordinary spatial specificity of water expulsion from the enzyme.  相似文献   

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