In aerobic organisms, cellular respiration involves electron transfer to oxygen through a series of membrane-bound protein complexes. The process maintains a transmembrane electrochemical proton gradient that is used, for example, in the synthesis of ATP. In mitochondria and many bacteria, the last enzyme complex in the electron transfer chain is cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO), which catalyses the four-electron reduction of O2 to H2O using electrons delivered by a water-soluble donor, cytochrome c. The electron transfer through CytcO, accompanied by proton uptake to form H2O drives the physical movement (pumping) of four protons across the membrane per reduced O2. So far, the molecular mechanism of such proton pumping driven by electron transfer has not been determined in any biological system. Here we show that proton pumping in CytcO is mechanistically coupled to proton transfer to O2 at the catalytic site, rather than to internal electron transfer. This scenario suggests a principle by which redox-driven proton pumps might operate and puts considerable constraints on possible molecular mechanisms by which CytcO translocates protons.
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.
We have characterized a putative Ca 2؉ -ATPase from the pathogenic bacterium Listeria monocytogenes with the locus tag lmo0841.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO) is a redox-driven proton pump in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria. The results from several studies have shown that zinc ions interfere with both the uptake and release of protons, presumably by binding near the orifice of the proton entrance and exit pathways. To elucidate the effect of Zn2+ binding on individual electron and proton-transfer reactions, in this study, we have investigated the reaction of the fully reduced R. sphaeroides CytcO with O2, both with enzyme in detergent solution and reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles, and, with and without, Zn2+. The results show that addition of Zn2+ at concentrations of < or = 250 microM to the outside of the vesicles did not alter the transition rates between intermediates PR (P3)-->F3-->O4. However, proton pumping was impaired specifically during the P3-->F3, but not during the F3-->O4 transition at Zn2+ concentrations of < or = 25 microM. Furthermore, proton pumping during the P3-->F3 transition was typically impaired with the "as isolated" CytcO, which was found to contain Zn2+ ions at microM concentration. As has already been shown, Zn2+ was also found to obstruct proton uptake during the P3-->F3 transition, presumably by binding to a site near the orifice of the D-pathway. In this work we found a KI of approximately 1 microM for this binding site. In conclusion, the results show that Zn2+ ions bind on both sides of CytcO and that binding of Zn2+ at the proton output side selectively impairs proton release during the P3-->F3 transition.
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 (D Х 200 s, ''peroxy'' to ''ferryl'' transition) followed by a significantly slower proton release to the other side of the membrane (D Х 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.heme-copper oxidases ͉ electron transfer ͉ membrane protein ͉ respiratory chain I n membrane-bound proton pumps the endergonic proton translocation across the membrane is driven by an exergonic reaction, e.g., electron transfer from a low-potential donor to a high-potential acceptor. The protons are translocated through proton-transfer pathways, typically composed of networks of hydrogen-bonded protonatable and polar amino acid side chains and bound water molecules, that span the transmembrane part of the protein. To prevent short-circuiting of the electrochemical gradient it is crucial that there is never simultaneous access (i.e., a direct contact) to the two membrane sides. One way to control the proton access is to alter the position of e.g., an amino acid side chain such that the group exchanges protons rapidly with either one side or the other side of the membrane (but never both sides simultaneously), defining an input and an output state (for review, see refs. 1-6). Proton pumping would be accomplished, for example, if the reaction that drives proton translocation is energetically coupled to changes in the pK a value of the protonatable group such that it has a high pK a in the input state and a low pK a in the output state. In the discussion below, we will refer to such a group as a ''pumping element.'' Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), which belongs to the hemecopper oxidase superfamily, is an example of a redox-driven proton pump (for review, see refs 4, 5, and 7-12). The CcOs are found in the cytoplasmic membrane in bacteria or the inner membrane of mitochondria, where they catalyze the reduction of molecular oxygen to water. The electrons are donated by...
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