Search for a command to run...
Complex I (NADH:quinone oxidoreductase, CI) is central to cellular aerobic energy metabolism. The L-shaped structure of CI is unique, where the hydrophilic arm is responsible for the electron transfer function and the membrane arm operates proton pumping. These two functional sites are spatially far apart yet functionally connected. This basic core subunit architecture is highly conserved from bacterial to mammalian CI. Here, to gain detailed mechanistic insight into the role of the membrane subunit ND2 in the coupling mechanism, we mutated several highly conserved residues in the middle of the membrane axis of NuoN, the E. coli CI homolog of ND2. To more precisely investigate the consequences of mutational effects on highly conserved residues, we purified each mutant CI and compared the mutational effects on electron transfer and proton pumping activity using our instant membrane reconstitution method with E. coli double knockout (DKO) membrane vesicles lacking both CI and alternative NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2). Thre results were corroborated by conventional proteoliposome reconstitution experiments. We found that Lys247 and Lys395 are absolutely essential for both electron transfer and proton pumping activities, while about 50% reduction of NADH oxidase activity but no reduction in proton pumping activity was observed in Lys217, and no significant decrease was detected in Glu133. Furthermore, unexpectedly, we were able to purify an NuoN knockout (ΔNuoN) mutant, which contained stoichiometric peripheral subunits NuoB, NuoCD, NuoE, NuoF, NuoG, and NuoI; and a substoichiometric amount of NuoH and a reduced amount of quinone. However, surprisingly, this isolated ΔNuoN CI showed CI activities (~30% of the WT) after being reconstituted into DKO membranes but not into proteoliposomes. Later, we confirmed by blue native PAGE that the wild-type CI was partially formed from ΔNuoN CI by recruiting its missing membrane subunits that existed in DKO membranes. Our data strongly suggest that ND2/NuoN plays an essential role in the coupling mechanism in CI. CI is the entry respiratory chain enzyme and is central to cellular energy metabolism. Two highly conserved lysine residues in the center of the antiporter-like membrane subunit ND2 are essential for the coupling mechanism between electron transfer and proton translocation.
Published in: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume 27, Issue 7, pp. 2990-2990
DOI: 10.3390/ijms27072990