AI Article Synopsis

  • The cbb(3)-type cytochrome c oxidases are important enzymes that help in respiration by reducing oxygen and pumping protons, featuring crucial metal centers and calcium ions in their structure.
  • The calcium ion connects key components of the enzyme and is linked to specific glutamate residues thought to be involved in proton exit pathways.
  • Mutations in these glutamates lead to loss of enzyme activity and calcium, indicating that calcium is critical for the proper functioning and structural integrity of the enzyme, rather than directly involved in proton transport.

Article Abstract

The cbb(3)-type cytochrome c oxidases are members of the family of heme-copper proton pumping respiratory oxygen reductases. The structure of the cbb(3)-type oxidase from Pseudomonas stutzeri reveals that, in addition to the six redox-active metal centers (two b-type hemes, three c-type hemes, and Cu(B)), the enzyme also contains at least one Ca(2+). The calcium bridges two propionate carboxyls at the interface between the low-spin heme b and the active-site heme b(3) and, in addition, is ligated to a serine in subunit CcoO and by a glutamate in subunit CcoN. The glutamate that is ligated to Ca(2+) is one of a pair of glutamic acid residues that has previously been suggested to be part of a proton exit pathway for pumped protons. In this work, mutations of these glutamates are investigated in the cbb(3)-type oxidases from Vibrio cholerae and Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Metal analysis shows that each of these wild-type enzymes contains Ca(2+). Mutations of the glutamate expected to ligate the Ca(2+) in each of these enzymes (E126 in V. cholerae and E180 in R. sphaeroides) result in a loss of activity as well as a loss of Ca(2+). Mutations of the nearby glutamate (E129 in V. cholerae and E183 in R. sphaeroides) also resulted in a loss of oxidase activity and a loss of Ca(2+). It is concluded that the Ca(2+) is essential for assembly of the fully functional enzyme and that neither of the glutamates is likely to be part of a pathway for pumped protons within the cbb(3)-type oxygen reductases. A more likely role for these glutamates is the maintenance of the structural integrity of the active conformation of the enzyme.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3477607PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi3006847DOI Listing

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