Abstract
The nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenases of mitochondria and bacteria are proton pumps that couple hydride ion transfer between NAD(H) and NADP(H) bound, respectively, to extramembranous domains I and III, to proton translocation by the membrane-intercalated domain II. Previous experiments have established the involvement of three conserved domain II residues in the proton pumping function of the enzyme: His91, Ser139, and Asn222, located on helices 9, 10, and 13, respectively. Eight highly conserved domain II glycines in helices 9, 10, 13, and 14 were mutated to alanine, and the mutant enzymes were assayed for hydride transfer between domains I and III and for proton translocation by domain II. One of the glycines on helix 14, Gly252, was further mutated to Cys, Ser, Thr, and Val, expression levels of the mutant enzymes were evaluated, and each was purified and assayed. The results show that Gly252 is essential for function and support a model for the proton channel composed of helices 9, 10, 13, and 14. Gly252 would allow spatial proximity of His91, Ser139, and Asn222 for proton conductance within the channel. Gly252 mutants are distinguished by high levels of cyclic transhydrogenation activity in the absence of added NADP(H) and by complete loss of proton pumping activity. The purified G252A mutant has <1% proton translocation and reverse transhydrogenation activity, retains 0.9 mol of NADP(H) per domain III, and has 96% intrinsic cyclic transhydrogenation activity, which does not exceed 100% upon the addition of NADP(H). These properties imply that Gly252 mutants exhibit a native-like domain II conformation while blocking proton translocation and coupled exchange of NADP(H) in domain III.
Highlights
Eight conserved glycines in domain II helices H9, H10, H13, and H14 were mutated to Ala and assayed, showing that Gly252 on H14 is essential for proton pumping in TH and confirming the participation of H14 in the proposed four-helix model for the proton channel
Acknowledgments—We thank Maria Latev and Cristel CortinasMiller for expert technical assistance
Summary
The nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenases of mitochondria and bacteria are proton pumps that couple hydride ion transfer between NAD(H) and NADP(H) bound, respectively, to extramembranous domains I and III, to proton translocation by the membrane-intercalated domain II. Nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenases (TH) of mitochondria and microorganisms are membrane-intercalated enzymes that couple the transfer of a hydride ion between soluble domains to translocation of a proton through the integral membrane domain. They catalyze the direct and stereospecific transfer of hydride between the 4A position of NAD(H) and the 4B position of NADP(H). Transmembrane proton translocation with a Hϩ/HϪ stoichiometry of unity (Reaction 1) (1–3)
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