Abstract

Ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) serves as an important electron junction in many respiratory systems. It funnels electrons coming from NADH and ubiquinol to cytochrome c, but it is also capable of producing significant amounts of the free radical superoxide. In situ and in other experimental systems, the enzyme exists as a dimer. But until recently, it was believed to operate as a functional monomer. Here we show that a functional dimer model is capable of explaining both kinetic and superoxide production rate data. The model consists of six electronic states characterized by the number of electrons deposited on the complex. It is fully reversible and strictly adheres to the thermodynamics governing the reactions. A total of nine independent data sets were used to parameterize the model. To explain the data with a consistent set of parameters, it was necessary to incorporate intramonomer Coulombic effects between hemes bL and bH and intermonomer Coulombic effects between bL hemes. The fitted repulsion energies fall within the theoretical range of electrostatic calculations. In addition, model analysis demonstrates that the Q pool is mostly oxidized under normal physiological operation but can switch to a more reduced state when reverse electron transport conditions are in place.

Highlights

  • Ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase is an essential enzyme for all mammalian cells

  • The model parameters were identified by simultaneously fitting all the kinetic and superoxide data with a single consistent set of parameters

  • The dissociation constants for the various Q analogs are highly correlated and not reliably identifiable using only the kinetic data

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Summary

Introduction

Ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) is an essential enzyme for all mammalian cells. We present a steady-state model of the kinetics of the bc1 complex capable of simultaneously simulating the rate of free radical production over a range of conditions.

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