The particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) is the first enzyme in the C1 metabolic pathway in methanotrophic bacteria. As this enzyme converts methane into methanol efficiently near room temperature, it has become the paradigm for developing an understanding of this difficult C1 chemistry. pMMO is a membranebound protein with three subunits (PmoB, PmoA, and PmoC) and 12− 14 coppers distributed among different sites. X-ray crystal structures that have revealed only three mononuclear coppers at three sites have neither disclosed the location of the active site nor the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme. Here we report a cyro-EM structure of holo-pMMO from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) at 2.5 Å, and develop quantitative electrostatic-potential profiling to scrutinize the nonprotein densities for signatures of the copper cofactors. Our results confirm a mononuclear Cu I at the A site, resolve two Cu I s at the B site, and uncover additional Cu I clusters at the PmoA/PmoC interface within the membrane (D site) and in the water-exposed C-terminal subdomain of the PmoB (E clusters). These findings complete the minimal set of copper factors required for catalytic turnover of pMMO, offering a glimpse of the catalytic machinery for methane oxidation according to the chemical principles underlying the mechanism proposed earlier.
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