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[Metabolism and Bioenergetics] Substitution of Tyrosine 146 in the dI Component of Proton-translocating Transhydrogenase Leads to Reversible Dissociation of the Active Dimer into Inactive Monomers

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Old 12-14-2007, 10:04 AM
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Default [Metabolism and Bioenergetics] Substitution of Tyrosine 146 in the dI Component of Proton-translocating Transhydrogenase Leads to Reversible Dissociation of the Active Dimer into Inactive Monomers

[Metabolism and Bioenergetics] Substitution of Tyrosine 146 in the dI Component of Proton-translocating Transhydrogenase Leads to Reversible Dissociation of the Active Dimer into Inactive Monomers

Transhydrogenase couples the redox reaction between NADH and NADP+ to proton translocation across a membrane. The protein has three components: dI binds NADH, dIII binds NADP+, and dII spans the membrane. Transhydrogenase is a "dimer" of two dI-dII-dIII "monomers"; x-ray structures suggested that the two catalytic sites alternate during turnover. Invariant Tyr146 in recombinant dI of Rhodospirillum rubrum transhydrogenase was substituted with Phe and Ala (proteins designated dI.Y146F and dI.Y146A, respectively). Analytical ultracentrifuge experiments and differential scanning calorimetry show that dI.Y146A more readily dissociates into monomers than wild-type dI. Analytical ultracentrifuge and Trp fluorescence experiments indicate that the dI.Y146A monomers bind NADH much more weakly than dimers. Wild-type dI and dI.Y146F reconstituted activity to dI-depleted membranes with similar characteristics. However, dI.Y146A reconstituted activity in its dimeric form but not in its monomeric form, this despite monomers retaining their native fold and binding to the dI-depleted membranes. It is suggested that transhydrogenase reconstructed with monomers of dI.Y146A is catalytically compromised, at least partly as a consequence of the lowered affinity for NADH, and this results from lost interactions between the nucleotide binding site and the protein β-hairpin upon dissociation of the dI dimer. The importance of these interactions and their coupling to dI domain rotation in the mechanism of action of transhydrogenase is emphasized. Two peaks in the 1H NMR spectrum of wild-type dI are broadened in dI.Y146A and are tentatively assigned to S-methyl groups of Met resonances in the β-hairpin, consistent with the segmental mobility of this feature in the structure.
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