Aerobic respiration is a key energy-producing pathway in many prokaryotes and virtually all eukaryotes. The final step of aerobic respiration is most commonly catalyzed by heme-copper oxidases embedded in the cytoplasmic or mitochondrial membrane. The majority of these terminal oxidases contain a prenylated heme (typically heme or occasionally heme ) in the active site. In addition, many heme-copper oxidases, including mitochondrial cytochrome oxidases, possess a second heme cofactor. Despite the critical role of heme in the electron transport chain, the details of the mechanism by which heme , the prototypical cellular heme, is converted to heme and then to heme remain poorly understood. Recent structural investigations, however, have helped clarify some elements of heme biosynthesis. In this review, we discuss the insight gained from these advances. In particular, we present a new structural model of heme synthase (HOS) based on distance restraints from inferred coevolutionary relationships and refined by molecular dynamics simulations that are in good agreement with the experimentally determined structures of HOS homologs. We also analyze the two structures of heme synthase (HAS) that have recently been solved by other groups. For both HOS and HAS, we discuss the proposed catalytic mechanisms and highlight how new insights into the heme-binding site locations shed light on previously obtained biochemical data. Finally, we explore the implications of the new structural data in the broader context of heme trafficking in the heme biosynthetic pathway and heme-copper oxidase assembly.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8877297PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10409238.2021.1957668DOI Listing

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