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The electron transfer flavoprotein Ubiquinone oxidoreductases

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-BIOENERGETICS
Volume 1797, Issue 12, Pages 1910-1916

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2010.10.007

Keywords

Fatty acid oxidation; Flavin; Iron-sulfur cluster; Ubiquinone; Electron-transfer; Superoxide

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Electron transfer flavoprotein ubiqionone oxidoreductase (ETT-QO) is a component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain that together with electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) forms a short pathway that transfers electrons from 11 different mitochondrial flavoprotein dehydrogenases to the ubiquinone pool The X-ray structure of the pig liver enzyme has been solved in the presence and absence of a bound ubiquinone This structure reveals ETF-QO to be a monotopic membrane protein with the cofactors FAD and a [4Fe-4S](+1+2) cluster organised to suggests that It is the flavin that serves as the immediate reductant of ubiquinone ETF-QO is very highly conserved in evolution and the recombinant enzyme from the bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides has allowed the mutational analysis of a number of residues that the structure suggested are Involved in modulating the reduction potential of the cofactors These experiments together with the spectroscopic measurement of the distances between the cofactors in solution have confirmed the intramolecular pathway of electron transfer from ETF to ubiquinone This approach can be extended as the R sphaeroides ETF-QO provides a template for investigating the mechanistic consequences of single amino acid substitutions of conserved residues that are associated with a mild and late onset variant of the metabolic disease multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD) (C) 2010 Elsevier B V All rights reserved

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