| Literature DB >> 18839290 |
Natalya V Dudkina1, Stephanie Sunderhaus, Egbert J Boekema, Hans-Peter Braun.
Abstract
The organization of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system within the inner mitochondrial membrane appears to be far more complicated than previously thought. In particular, the individual protein complexes of the OXPHOS system (complexes I to V) were found to specifically interact forming defined supramolecular structures. Blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and single particle electron microscopy proved to be especially valuable in studying the so-called "respiratory supercomplexes". Based on these procedures, increasing evidence was presented supporting a "solid state" organization of the OXPHOS system. Here, we summarize results on the formation, organisation and function of the various types of mitochondrial OXPHOS supercomplexes.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18839290 PMCID: PMC2780661 DOI: 10.1007/s10863-008-9167-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bioenerg Biomembr ISSN: 0145-479X Impact factor: 2.945
Fig. 1Models of the mitochondrial OXPHOS system. a The “fluid state model”. b Defined interactions of OXPHOS complexes within supercomplexes as predicted by the “solid state model”. c Integrated model of the OXPHOS system. M Matrix; IM inner mitochondrial membrane; IMS mitochondrial intermembrane space
Fig. 2Structure of the complex I and its supercomplexes from bovine heart mitochondria. Supercomplexes were obtained by solubilization of isolated mitochondria with dodecylmaltoside (7.5 g/g) and digitonin (25 g/g) followed by purification via sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation (S. Sunderhaus and N.V. Dudkina, unpublished data) a Side-view of complex I. Position of the membrane is indicated in semi-transparent brown. b Side-view of the I + III2 supercomplex. c Modelling of the respirasome. X-ray structures of the hydrophilic domain of complex I from Thermus thermophilus (pink, Sazanov and Hinchliffe 2006), bovine cytochrome c reductase (green, Iwata et al. 1998) and bovine cytochrome c oxidase (purple, Tsukihara et al. 1996) were used. The membrane arm of complex I is given in beige. d An aggregate of two dimeric ATP synthases on the same scale as the complex I supercomplexes. e Side view of the I + III2 supercomplex with a larger membrane part, likely representing the I + III2 + IV supercomplex or respirasome. f Scheme emphasizing that ATP synthase and complex I have the same height. g Respirasome in an intermediate orientation on the carbon support film. h The same respirasome as in (e), but prepared using deep negative stain. This reveals the position of cytochrome c reductase within the I + III2 + IV supercomplex (white arrow). The insert in the upper right corner is purified cytochrome c reductase complex from Arabidopsis in a similar position (Dudkina et al. 2005a). i Model of the respirasome in the intermediate orientation. The position of complex III2 is according to (e); the hydrophilic arm of complex I was generated from the X-ray data of T. thermophilus by turning it aproximately 30° away from a side-view orientation and the remainder of the supercomplex are complex I densities (transparent beige). The location of complex IV is still uncertain. The bar of the EM frames is 10 nm
Fig. 3Dimers and multimers of ATP synthase. a Scheme of the multimeric chain of ATP synthases in mitochondria, which can be disrupted by detergent in two ways giving small and large angle dimers. Purple and blue circles symbolize monomeric ATP synthase complexes and ochre and bright green represent dimer-specific subunits. In mitochondria of S. cerevisiae the large angle dimers of 90° (b) and small angle dimers of 35° (c) were found in similar proportions. d Distribution of angles between the monomers of dimeric ATP synthase from S. cerevisiae. y-axis: number of particles; x-axis: size of the angle in degrees. e Dominant projection map of dimeric ATP synthase from Polytomella which corresponds to a stable dimer in which the monomers exclusively make an angle of 70°. The bars are 10 nm