Abstract

The succinate dehydrogenase complex (complex II) is a highly conserved protein complex composed of the SDH1 to SDH4 subunits in bacteria and in the mitochondria of animals and fungi. The reason for the occurrence of up to four additional subunits in complex II of plants, termed SDH5 to SDH8, so far is a mystery. Here, we present a biochemical approach to investigate the internal subunit arrangement of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) complex II. Using low-concentration detergent treatments, the holo complex is dissected into subcomplexes that are analyzed by a three-dimensional gel electrophoresis system. Protein identifications by mass spectrometry revealed that the largest subcomplex (IIa) represents the succinate dehydrogenase domain composed of SDH1 and SDH2. Another subcomplex (IIb) is composed of the SDH3, SDH4, SDH6, and SDH7 subunits. All four proteins include transmembrane helices and together form the membrane anchor of complex II. Sequence analysis revealed that SDH3 and SDH4 lack helices conserved in other organisms. Using homology modeling and phylogenetic analyses, we present evidence that SDH6 and SDH7 substitute missing sequence stretches of SDH3 and SDH4 in plants. Together with SDH5, which is liberated upon dissection of complex II into subcomplexes, SDH6 and SDH7 also add some hydrophilic mass to plant complex II, which possibly inserts further functions into this smallest protein complex of the oxidative phosphorylation system (which is not so small in plants).

Highlights

  • The succinate dehydrogenase complex is a highly conserved protein complex composed of the SDH1 to SDH4 subunits in bacteria and in the mitochondria of animals and fungi

  • We show that the plant-specific SDH6 and SDH7 proteins are tightly bound to SDH3 and SDH4 and contribute to the membrane domain of mitochondrial complex II from Arabidopsis

  • The identities of the separated protein complexes and supercomplexes are given to the left: I, complex I; II, complex II; III2, dimeric complex III; IV, complex IV; V, complex V; V(F1), F1 part of complex V; I+III2, supercomplex formed by complexes I and III2

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Summary

Introduction

The succinate dehydrogenase complex (complex II) is a highly conserved protein complex composed of the SDH1 to SDH4 subunits in bacteria and in the mitochondria of animals and fungi. The overall structure of the succinate dehydrogenase complex is remarkably conserved in bacteria, animals, It was quite a surprise when complex II from flowering plants was found to include four additional subunits termed SDH5, SDH6, SDH7, and SDH8 (Eubel et al, 2003; Millar et al, 2004; Huang et al, 2010; Huang and Millar, 2013; Senkler et al, 2017). Sequence analyses so far have not revealed any ideas on the functions of the additional SDH proteins They insert an extra function into complex II in flowering plants (Millar et al, 2004). The SDH subunits are encoded by 13 genes in Arabidopsis

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