Juna Rauch , Katharina Kurscheidt , Kai-Wei Shen , Andreea Andrei , Noel Daum , Yavuz Öztürk , Frederic Melin , Gunhild Layer , Petra Hellwig , Fevzi Daldal , Hans-Georg Koch
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Respiratory complexes, such as cytochrome oxidases, are cofactor-containing multi-subunit protein complexes that are critically important for energy metabolism in all domains of life. Their intricate assembly strictly depends on accessory proteins, which coordinate subunit associations and cofactor deliveries. The small membrane protein CcoS was previously identified as an essential assembly factor to produce an active cbb3-type cytochrome oxidase (cbb3-Cox) in Rhodobacter capsulatus, but its function remained unknown. Here we show that the ΔccoS strain assembles a heme b deficient cbb3-Cox, in which the CcoN-CcoO subunit association is impaired. Chemical crosslinking demonstrates that CcoS interacts with the CcoN and CcoP subunits of cbb3-Cox, and that it stabilizes the interaction of the Cu-chaperone SenC with cbb3-Cox. CcoS lacks heme- or Cu-binding motifs, and we did not find evidence for direct heme or Cu binding; rather our data indicate that CcoS, together with SenC, coordinates heme and Cu insertion into cbb3-Cox.
期刊介绍:
BBA Bioenergetics covers the area of biological membranes involved in energy transfer and conversion. In particular, it focuses on the structures obtained by X-ray crystallography and other approaches, and molecular mechanisms of the components of photosynthesis, mitochondrial and bacterial respiration, oxidative phosphorylation, motility and transport. It spans applications of structural biology, molecular modeling, spectroscopy and biophysics in these systems, through bioenergetic aspects of mitochondrial biology including biomedicine aspects of energy metabolism in mitochondrial disorders, neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson''s and Alzheimer''s, aging, diabetes and even cancer.