Rotational motion of yeast cytochrome oxidase in phosphatidylcholine complexes studied by saturation-transfer electron spin resonance
- 27 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 28 (13) , 5634-5643
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00439a045
Abstract
Cytochrome oxidase from yeast has been convalentl ylabeld with a nitroxide derivative of maleimide and reconstituted in lipid-substituted complexes with dimyristoyl-, dioleoyl-, or dielaidoyl-phosphatidylcholine. The rotational mobility of the enzyme in the complexes has been studied as a function of temperature and time, and of lipid/protein ratio, using saturation-transfer electron spin resonance spectroscopy. For complexes with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, the rotational mobility of the protein decreases abruptly below the gel-to-fluid-phase transition. This change is accompanied by a lateral segregation of the protein, as seen by freeze-fracture electron microscopy, and by an increase in the activation energy for the enzymatic activity. A time-dependent decrease in the rotational motion of the protein is observed on incubating at temperatures in the fluid phase of the lipid. This corresponds with a time-dependent loss of enzyme activity observed on incubation at temperatures in the fluid phase, but not at temperatures in the gel phase, over a period of 3 h. The rotational mobility decreases with increasing protein concentration in the complexes, both in the fluid and the gel phases. The dependence of the protein mobility on lipid/protein ratio can be interpreted quantitatively in terms of the effect of increased random protein-protein contacts in the fluid phase. The maximum limiting rotational correlation time for the protein diffusion at high lipid/protein ratios in the fluid phase is .tau.R.dblvert. .apprxeq. 25 .mu.s, suggesting that the protein is present as either a monomer or more probably a dimer in the reconstituted membrane.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
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