scholarly journals Lipid Composition Affects the Efficiency in the Functional Reconstitution of the Cytochrome c Oxidase

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (19) ◽  
pp. 6981
Author(s):  
Katharina Gloria Hugentobler ◽  
Dorothea Heinrich ◽  
Johan Berg ◽  
Joachim Heberle ◽  
Peter Brzezinski ◽  
...  

The transmembrane protein cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is the terminal oxidase in the respiratory chain of many aerobic organisms and catalyzes the reduction of dioxygen to water. This process maintains an electrochemical proton gradient across the membrane hosting the oxidase. CcO is a well-established model enzyme in bioenergetics to study the proton-coupled electron transfer reactions and protonation dynamics involved in these processes. Its catalytic mechanism is subject to ongoing intense research. Previous research, however, was mainly focused on the turnover of oxygen and electrons in CcO, while studies reporting proton turnover rates of CcO, that is the rate of proton uptake by the enzyme, are scarce. Here, we reconstitute CcO from R. sphaeroides into liposomes containing a pH sensitive dye and probe changes of the pH value inside single proteoliposomes using fluorescence microscopy. CcO proton turnover rates are quantified at the single-enzyme level. In addition, we recorded the distribution of the number of functionally reconstituted CcOs across the proteoliposome population. Studies are performed using proteoliposomes made of native lipid sources, such as a crude extract of soybean lipids and the polar lipid extract of E. coli, as well as purified lipid fractions, such as phosphatidylcholine extracted from soybean lipids. It is shown that these lipid compositions have only minor effects on the CcO proton turnover rate, but can have a strong impact on the reconstitution efficiency of functionally active CcOs. In particular, our experiments indicate that efficient functional reconstitution of CcO is strongly promoted by the addition of anionic lipids like phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin.

1998 ◽  
Vol 95 (23) ◽  
pp. 13606-13611 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Karpefors ◽  
P. Adelroth ◽  
Y. Zhen ◽  
S. Ferguson-Miller ◽  
P. Brzezinski

Biochemistry ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 496-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khadijeh S. Alnajjar ◽  
Jonathan Hosler ◽  
Lawrence Prochaska

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus L. Björck ◽  
Jóhanna Vilhjálmsdóttir ◽  
Andrew M. Hartley ◽  
Brigitte Meunier ◽  
Linda Näsvik Öjemyr ◽  
...  

AbstractIn cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO) reduction of O2 to water is linked to uptake of eight protons from the negative side of the membrane: four are substrate protons used to form water and four are pumped across the membrane. In bacterial oxidases, the substrate protons are taken up through the K and the D proton pathways, while the pumped protons are transferred through the D pathway. On the basis of studies with CytcO isolated from bovine heart mitochondria, it was suggested that in mitochondrial CytcOs the pumped protons are transferred though a third proton pathway, the H pathway, rather than through the D pathway. Here, we studied these reactions in S. cerevisiae CytcO, which serves as a model of the mammalian counterpart. We analyzed the effect of mutations in the D (Asn99Asp and Ile67Asn) and H pathways (Ser382Ala and Ser458Ala) and investigated the kinetics of electron and proton transfer during the reaction of the reduced CytcO with O2. No effects were observed with the H pathway variants while in the D pathway variants the functional effects were similar to those observed with the R. sphaeroides CytcO. The data indicate that the S. cerevisiae CytcO uses the D pathway for proton uptake and presumably also for proton pumping.


Nature ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 440 (7085) ◽  
pp. 829-832 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilya Belevich ◽  
Michael I. Verkhovsky ◽  
Mårten Wikström

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