Bacteria power their energy metabolism using membrane-bound respiratory enzymes that capture chemical energy and transduce it by pumping protons or Na
ions across their cell membranes. Recent ...breakthroughs in molecular bioenergetics have elucidated the architecture and function of many bacterial respiratory enzymes, although key mechanistic principles remain debated. In this Review, we present an overview of the structure, function and bioenergetic principles of modular bacterial respiratory chains and discuss their differences from the eukaryotic counterparts. We also discuss bacterial supercomplexes, which provide central energy transduction systems in several bacteria, including important pathogens, and which could open up possible avenues for treatment of disease.
Biological energy conversion is driven by efficient enzymes that capture, store and transfer protons and electrons across large distances. Recent advances in structural biology have provided ...atomic-scale blueprints of these types of remarkable molecular machinery, which together with biochemical, biophysical and computational experiments allow us to derive detailed energy transduction mechanisms for the first time. Here, I present one of the most intricate and least understood types of biological energy conversion machinery, the respiratory complex I, and how its redox-driven proton-pump catalyses charge transfer across approximately 300 Å distances. After discussing the functional elements of complex I, a putative mechanistic model for its action-at-a-distance effect is presented, and functional parallels are drawn to other redox- and light-driven ion pumps.
Complex I functions as an initial electron acceptor in aerobic respiratory chains that reduces quinone and pumps protons across a biological membrane. This remarkable charge transfer process extends ...ca. 300 Å and it is initiated by a poorly understood proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reaction between nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and a protein-bound flavin (FMN) cofactor. We combine here large-scale density functional theory calculations and quantum/classical models with atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to probe the energetics and dynamics of the NADH-driven PCET reaction in complex I. We find that the reaction takes place by concerted hydrogen atom (H•) transfer that couples to an electron transfer (eT) between the aromatic ring systems of the cofactors and further triggers reduction of the nearby FeS centers. In bacterial, Escherichia coli-like complex I isoforms, reduction of the N1a FeS center increases the binding affinity of the oxidized NAD+ that prevents the nucleotide from leaving prematurely. This electrostatic trapping could provide a protective gating mechanism against reactive oxygen species formation. We also find that proton transfer from the transient FMNH• to a nearby conserved glutamate (Glu97) residue favors eT from N1a onward along the FeS chain and modulates the binding of a new NADH molecule. The PCET in complex I isoforms with low-potential N1a centers is also discussed. On the basis of our combined results, we propose a putative mechanistic model for the NADH-driven proton/electron-transfer reaction in complex I.
Conspectus Biological energy conversion is catalyzed by membrane-bound proteins that transduce chemical or light energy into energy forms that power endergonic processes in the cell. At a molecular ...level, these catalytic processes involve elementary electron-, proton-, charge-, and energy-transfer reactions that take place in the intricate molecular machineries of cell respiration and photosynthesis. Recent developments in structural biology, particularly cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM), have resolved the molecular architecture of several energy transducing proteins, but detailed mechanistic principles of their charge transfer reactions still remain poorly understood and a major challenge for modern biochemical research. To this end, multiscale molecular simulations provide a powerful approach to probe mechanistic principles on a broad range of time scales (femtoseconds to milliseconds) and spatial resolutions (101–106 atoms), although technical challenges also require balancing between the computational accuracy, cost, and approximations introduced within the model. Here we discuss how the combination of atomistic (aMD) and hybrid quantum/classical molecular dynamics (QM/MM MD) simulations with free energy (FE) sampling methods can be used to probe mechanistic principles of enzymes responsible for biological energy conversion. We present mechanistic explorations of long-range proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) dynamics in the highly intricate respiratory chain enzyme Complex I, which functions as a redox-driven proton pump in bacterial and mitochondrial respiratory chains by catalyzing a 300 Å fully reversible PCET process. This process is initiated by a hydride (H–) transfer between NADH and FMN, followed by long-range (>100 Å) electron transfer along a wire of 8 FeS centers leading to a quinone biding site. The reduction of the quinone to quinol initiates dissociation of the latter to a second membrane-bound binding site, and triggers proton pumping across the membrane domain of complex I, in subunits up to 200 Å away from the active site. Our simulations across different size and time scales suggest that transient charge transfer reactions lead to changes in the internal hydration state of key regions, local electric fields, and the conformation of conserved ion pairs, which in turn modulate the dynamics of functional steps along the reaction cycle. Similar functional principles, which operate on much shorter length scales, are also found in some unrelated proteins, suggesting that enzymes may employ conserved principles in the catalysis of biological energy transduction processes.
Quantum chemical calculations are important for elucidating light-capturing mechanisms in photobiological systems. The time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) has become a popular ...methodology because of its balance between accuracy and computational scaling, despite its problems in describing, for example, charge transfer states. As a step toward systematically understanding the performance of TDDFT calculations on biomolecular systems, we study here 17 commonly used density functionals, including seven long-range separated functionals, and compare the obtained results with excitation energies calculated at the approximate second order coupled-cluster theory level (CC2). The benchmarking set includes the first five singlet excited states of 11 chemical analogues of biochromophores from the green fluorescent protein, rhodopsin/bacteriorhodopsin (Rh/bR), and the photoactive yellow protein. We find that commonly used pure density functionals such as BP86, PBE, M11-L, and hybrid functionals with 20–25% of Hartree–Fock (HF) exchange (B3LYP, PBE0) have a tendency to consistently underestimate vertical excitation energies (VEEs) relative to the CC2 values, whereas hybrid density functionals with around 50% HF exchange such as BHLYP, PBE50, and M06-2X and long-range corrected functionals such as CAM-B3LYP, ωPBE, ωPBEh, ωB97X, ωB97XD, BNL, and M11 overestimate the VEEs. We observe that calculations using the CAM-B3LYP and ωPBEh functionals with 65% and 100% long-range HF exchange, respectively, lead to an overestimation of the VEEs by 0.2–0.3 eV for the benchmarking set. To reduce the systematic error, we introduce here two new empirical functionals, CAMh-B3LYP and ωhPBE0, for which we adjusted the long-range HF exchange to 50%. The introduced parameterization reduces the mean signed average (MSA) deviation to 0.07 eV and the root mean square (rms) deviation to 0.17 eV as compared to the CC2 values. In the present study, TDDFT calculations using the aug-def2-TZVP basis sets, the best performing functionals relative to CC2 are ωhPBE0 (rms = 0.17, MSA = 0.06 eV); CAMh-B3LYP (rms = 0.16, MSA = 0.07 eV); and PBE0 (rms = 0.23, MSA = −0.14 eV). For the popular range-separated CAM-B3LYP functional, we obtain an rms value of 0.31 eV and an MSA value of 0.25 eV, which can be compared with the rms and MSA values of 0.37 and −0.31 eV, respectively, as obtained at the B3LYP level.
In biology, self-assembly of proteins and energy-consuming reaction cycles are intricately coupled. For example, tubulin is activated and deactivated for assembly by a guanosine triphosphate ...(GTP)-driven reaction cycle, and the emerging microtubules catalyze this reaction cycle by changing the microenvironment of the activated tubulin. Recently, synthetic analogs of chemically fueled assemblies have emerged, but examples in which assembly and reaction cycles are reciprocally coupled remain rare. In this work, we report a peptide that can be activated and deactivated for self-assembly. The emerging assemblies change the microenvironment of their building blocks, which consequently accelerate the rates of building block deactivation and reactivation. We quantitatively understand the mechanisms at play, and we are thus able to tune the catalysis by molecular design of the peptide precursor.
Kaila et al examine proton-coupled electron transfer in cytochrome oxidase, focusing on the transfer of electrons and protons, electron tunneling in cytochrome c oxidase, catalytic cycle and states ...of the binuclear center, and proton pumping.
Photosynthetic organisms capture light energy to drive their energy metabolism, and employ the chemical reducing power to convert carbon dioxide (CO
) into organic molecules. Photorespiration, ...however, significantly reduces the photosynthetic yields. To survive under low CO
concentrations, cyanobacteria evolved unique carbon-concentration mechanisms that enhance the efficiency of photosynthetic CO
fixation, for which the molecular principles have remained unknown. We show here how modular adaptations enabled the cyanobacterial photosynthetic complex I to concentrate CO
using a redox-driven proton-pumping machinery. Our cryo-electron microscopy structure at 3.2 Å resolution shows a catalytic carbonic anhydrase module that harbours a Zn
active site, with connectivity to proton-pumping subunits that are activated by electron transfer from photosystem I. Our findings illustrate molecular principles in the photosynthetic complex I machinery that enabled cyanobacteria to survive in drastically changing CO
conditions.
The respiratory complex I transduces redox energy into an electrochemical proton gradient in aerobic respiratory chains, powering energy-requiring processes in the cell. However, despite recently ...resolved molecular structures, the mechanism of this gigantic enzyme remains poorly understood. By combining large-scale quantum and classical simulations with site-directed mutagenesis and biophysical experiments, we show here how the conformational state of buried ion-pairs and water molecules control the protonation dynamics in the membrane domain of complex I and establish evolutionary conserved long-range coupling elements. We suggest that an electrostatic wave propagates in forward and reverse directions across the 200 Å long membrane domain during enzyme turnover, without significant dissipation of energy. Our findings demonstrate molecular principles that enable efficient long-range proton–electron coupling (PCET) and how perturbation of this PCET machinery may lead to development of mitochondrial disease.