4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Functional flexibility of electron flow between quinol oxidation Qo site of cytochrome bc1 and cytochrome c revealed by combinatory effects of mutations in cytochrome b, iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-BIOENERGETICS
Volume 1859, Issue 9, Pages 754-761

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2018.04.010

Keywords

Cytochrome bc(1); Electron transport chain; Redox equilibrium; Enzymatic activity; Uphill electron transfer; Domain movement

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2015/18/A/NZ1/00046]
  2. Ministry of Science and Higher Education

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Transfer of electron from quinol to cytochrome c is an integral part of catalytic cycle of cytochrome bc(1). It is a multi-step reaction involving: i) electron transfer from quinol bound at the catalytic Q(o) site to the Rieske iron sulfur ([2Fe-2S]) cluster, ii) large-scale movement of a domain containing [2Fe-2S] cluster (ISP-HD) towards cytochrome c(1), iii) reduction of cytochrome c(1) by reduced [2Fe-2S] cluster, iv) reduction of cytochrome c by cytochrome c(1). In this work, to examine this multi-step reaction we introduced various types of barriers for electron transfer within the chain of [2Fe-2S] cluster, cytochrome c(1) and cytochrome c. The barriers included: impediment in the motion of ISP-HD, uphill electron transfer from [2Fe-2S] cluster to heme c(1) of cytochrome c(1), and impediment in the catalytic quinol oxidation. The barriers were introduced separately or in various combinations and their effects on enzymatic activity of cytochrome bc(1) were compared. This analysis revealed significant degree of functional flexibility allowing the cofactor chains to accommodate certain structural and/or redox potential changes without losing overall electron and proton transfers capabilities. In some cases inhibitory effects compensated one another to improve/restore the function. The results support an equilibrium model in which a random oscillation of ISP-HD between the Q(o) site and cytochrome c(1) helps maintaining redox equilibrium between all cofactors of the chain. We propose a new concept in which independence of the dynamics of the Q(o) site substrate and the motion of ISP-HD is one of the elements supporting this equilibrium and also is a potential factor limiting the overall catalytic rate.

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