Sandbox Reserved 1600

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 33: Line 33:
==Electron Source==
==Electron Source==
-
An electron source is needed in order for the redox reaction of O₂ to occur. Cytochrome bd oxidase uses the quinol molecule ubiquinone as an electron donor. The chemical structure of ubiquinone is shown in Fig. 2. [[Image:Ubiquinone.jpg|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 2. Chemical structure of ubiquinone.]] As shown in the <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_structure_full/4'>overall structure</scene> the <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_q_loop/2'>Q loop</scene> is on the extracellular surface and provides a binding site for ubiquinone. <ref name = ”Safarian” /> As mentioned in the Active Site section, Heme <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_qloop_zoom/3'>B558 is closest in proximity to the Q loop</scene> and thus is the suggested electron acceptor. This suggestion is further supported by the conservation of <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_trp/2'>Trp374</scene> often found as intermediate electron receptors in biological electron transfer chains. <ref name =”Safarian” />
+
An electron source is needed in order for the redox reaction of O₂ to occur. Cytochrome bd oxidase uses the quinol molecule [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coenzyme_Q10 ubiquinone] as an electron donor. The chemical structure of ubiquinone is shown in Fig. 2. [[Image:Ubiquinone.jpg|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 2. Chemical structure of ubiquinone.]] As shown in the <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_structure_full/4'>overall structure</scene> the <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_q_loop/2'>Q loop</scene> is on the extracellular surface and provides a binding site for ubiquinone. <ref name = ”Safarian” /> As mentioned in the Active Site section, Heme <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_qloop_zoom/3'>B558 is closest in proximity to the Q loop</scene> and thus is the suggested electron acceptor. This suggestion is further supported by the conservation of <scene name='83/838655/Bdoxidase_trp/2'>Trp374</scene> often found as intermediate electron receptors in biological electron transfer chains. <ref name =”Safarian” />
==Potential Proton Pathways==
==Potential Proton Pathways==
Line 51: Line 51:
As shown above, the electrons required for the reduction mechanism come from a ubiquinol molecule (Fig. 2) that simultaneously binds to the Q-loop and gets oxidized giving 4e<sup>-</sup> to Heme B558. Once at Heme B558 the 4e<sup>-</sup> will be shuttled directly to Heme D to be used in the reduction of O₂. The electron pathway is depicted in <font color='blue'><b>blue</b></font> in Figure 4.
As shown above, the electrons required for the reduction mechanism come from a ubiquinol molecule (Fig. 2) that simultaneously binds to the Q-loop and gets oxidized giving 4e<sup>-</sup> to Heme B558. Once at Heme B558 the 4e<sup>-</sup> will be shuttled directly to Heme D to be used in the reduction of O₂. The electron pathway is depicted in <font color='blue'><b>blue</b></font> in Figure 4.
-
When all of these elements of the reduction aggregate in the active site, the protons and electrons are shuttled to Heme D, where the actual reduction occurs. The 2H₂O molecules are then expelled, as seen in <font color='red'><b>red</b></font> in Figure 4. The shuttling of these electrons and protons also helps assist with the electric chemical potential in the cellular membrane.
+
When all of these elements of the reduction aggregate in the active site, the protons and electrons are shuttled to Heme D, where the actual reduction occurs. The 2H₂O molecules are then expelled, as seen in <font color='red'><b>red</b></font> in Figure 4. The shuttling of these ele
-
 
+
-
 
+
-
= Structure Similarity to bd oxidase found in ''E. coli'' =
+
-
[[Image:Aligmentbdoidase.jpg|200 px|left|thumb|Figure 5. Alignment of bd oxidase for the organisms ''G. thermodenitrificans'' (PDB: [[5doq]]) shown in <font color='blue'><b>blue</b></font> and ''E. coli'' (PDB: [[6rko]]) shown in <font color='purple'><b>purple</b></font>.]] [[Image:Heme alignment.png|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 6. Heme arrangements for the organisms ''G. thermodenitrificans'' and ''E. coli''. Heme D (green); Heme B595 and Heme B558 shown in pink]] The structure of bd oxidase for ''Geobacillus thermodenitrificans'' is highly similar to the structure of bd oxidase for [[6rko|''E. coli'']] with the only noticeable difference being the length of the Q-loop. <ref name= ”Theßeling”>PMID:31723136</ref> The similarity and differences between the two proteins can be seen in the alignment of their main structures (Fig.5). Although only having one noticeable difference in structure, this difference causes the two proteins to have different active sites (Fig. 6). In particular, the <scene name='83/838655/Hemes_ecoli/2'> hemes of bd oxidase in E. coli </scene> are arranged differently than the <scene name='83/838655/Hemes/4'>hemes of bd oxidase in G. thermodenitrificans</scene>. The main reason for this change in heme arrangement is because of the <scene name='83/838655/Oxygen_site_ecoli/1'>oxygen binding site</scene> being located differently in ''E. coli'', thus causing a different active site arrangement in the protein. <ref name = ”Theßeling” />
+
-
 
+
-
 
+
-
</StructureSection>
+
-
== References ==
+
-
<references/>
+
-
 
+
-
==Student Contributors==
+
-
 
+
-
Emma H Harris
+
-
 
+
-
Carson E Middlebrook
+

Revision as of 18:11, 20 April 2020

bd oxidase; Geobacillus thermodenitrificans

bd oxidase (PDB: 5doq)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
Personal tools