Abstract

The interaction between cytochrome c oxidase complex and adenosine triphosphate synthase (F1F0) complex in the purified, dispersed state and embedded in phospholipid vesicles was studied by differential scanning calorimetry and by spin-label electron paramagnetic resonance. The detergent-dispersed cytochrome oxidase and F1F0 complexes undergo endothermic thermodenaturation. However, when these complexes are embedded in phospholipid vesicles, they undergo exothermic thermodenaturation. The energy released is believed to result from the collapse of a strained interaction between unsaturated fatty acyl groups of phospholipids and an exposed area of the complex formed by the removal of interacting proteins. The exothermic enthalpy change of thermodenaturation of a protein-phospholipid exothermic enthalpy change of thermodenaturation of a protein-phospholipid vesicle containing both cytochrome oxidase complex and F1F0 was smaller than that of a mixture of protein-phospholipid vesicles formed from each individual electron transfer complex. This suggests specific interaction between cytochrome oxidase complex and F1F0 in the membrane. Further evidence for interaction between these two complexes is provided by saturation transfer EPR studies in which the rotational correlation time of spin-labeled cytochrome oxidase increases significantly when the complex is mixed with F1F0 prior to being embedded in phospholipid vesicles. From these results, it is concluded that at least a part of cytochrome oxidase and a part of F1F0 form a supermacromolecular complex in the inner mitochondrial membrane. No such supermacromolecular complex is detected between F1F0 and ubiquinol--cytochrome c reductase.

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