Surface Proton Donors for the D-Pathway of CytochromecOxidase in the Absence of Subunit III

Abstract
The major proton-transfer pathway into the buried active site of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is the D-pathway that begins with the subunit I residue Asp-132 on the inner protein surface (the cytoplasmic surface of the aa3-type CcO of Rhodobacter sphaeroides). Asp-132 is surrounded by residues from both subunits I and III. In the absence of subunit III, CcO retains activity, but the functional characteristics of the D-pathway are significantly altered such that the transfer of protons from Asp-132 into the pathway becomes the rate-limiting step. Determination of the pH-dependence of the rate constant for D-pathway proton uptake during the single-turnover of CcO indicates that the pKa of Asp-132 in the absence of subunit III is ∼7. The removal of subunit III also allows for alternative surface proton donor/acceptors other than Asp-132. With Asp-132 altered to alanine, the rate constant for D-pathway proton uptake is very slow (5 s-1) in the presence of subunit III. Once subunit III is removed, the proton uptake rate constant increases 80-fold, to 400 s-1. The pKa associated with this uptake is >10, and the initial proton donor/acceptor in D132A III (−) is proposed to be a water of the D-pathway rather than an amino acid residue. Arachidonic acid (Aa), which stimulates the activity of several D-pathway mutant CcOs, appears to become the initial proton donor/acceptor in the absence of subunit III, whether or not Asp-132 is altered. Aa shifts the pKa of the initial proton donor to 7.6 for both wild-type (WT) III (−) and D132A III (−). The results indicate that subunit III creates a barrier that helps prevent protons from donors other than Asp-132 from directly accessing the internal waters of the D-pathway, while the subunit also provides an environment that increases the rate at which Asp-132 transfers protons into the D-pathway.

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