Abstract

NADH-quinone oxidoreductase (complex I) couples electron transfer from NADH to quinone with proton translocation across the membrane. Quinone reduction is a key step for energy transmission from the site of quinone reduction to the remotely located proton-pumping machinery of the enzyme. Although structural biology studies have proposed the existence of a long and narrow quinone-access channel, the physiological relevance of this channel remains debatable. We investigated here whether complex I in bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMPs) can catalytically reduce a series of oversized ubiquinones (OS-UQs), which are highly unlikely to transit the narrow channel because their side chain includes a bulky "block" that is ∼13 Å across. We found that some OS-UQs function as efficient electron acceptors from complex I, accepting electrons with an efficiency comparable with ubiquinone-2. The catalytic reduction and proton translocation coupled with this reduction were completely inhibited by different quinone-site inhibitors, indicating that the reduction of OS-UQs takes place at the physiological reaction site for ubiquinone. Notably, the proton-translocating efficiencies of OS-UQs significantly varied depending on their side-chain structures, suggesting that the reaction characteristics of OS-UQs affect the predicted structural changes of the quinone reaction site required for triggering proton translocation. These results are difficult to reconcile with the current channel model; rather, the access path for ubiquinone may be open to allow OS-UQs to access the reaction site. Nevertheless, contrary to the observations in SMPs, OS-UQs were not catalytically reduced by isolated complex I reconstituted into liposomes. We discuss possible reasons for these contradictory results.

Highlights

  • NADH-quinone oxidoreductase couples electron transfer from NADH to quinone with proton translocation across the membrane

  • OS-UQ1ϪOSUQ3 functioned as an electron acceptor from complex I in submitochondrial particles (SMPs); the apparent electron transfer activity of OS-UQ2 was comparable with that of UQ2

  • Higher solubility of short-chain UQ in water is favorable for apparent electron transfer activity in SMPs, the activity of OS-UQ1 was rather poorer than that of OS-UQ2

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Summary

Introduction

NADH-quinone oxidoreductase (complex I) couples electron transfer from NADH to quinone with proton translocation across the membrane. Based on structural biology studies [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12], it is considered that ubiquinones (UQs) of varying isoprenyl chain length (UQ1–UQ10) enter and transit the quinone-access channel to be reduced at the “top” of the channel This channel extends from the membrane interior to the Fe-S cluster N2 (ϳ30 Å long) and is a completely enclosed tunnel with a narrow entry point (ϳ3 ϫ 5Å diameter) that is framed by transmembrane helix 1 (TMH1), TMH6, and amphipathic ␣-helix 1 from the

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