Electron tunneling pathways in respiratory complex I. The role of the internal water between the enzyme subunits

Recently, the atomistic details of the electronic wiring of seven Fe/S clusters (N3, N1b, N4, N5, N6a, N6b, N2) of respiratory complex I, along which electrons are injected into the electron transport chain, have been revealed; the tunneling pathways between the clusters and the contributing key res...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of electroanalytical chemistry (Lausanne, Switzerland). - 1999. - 660(2011), 2 vom: 15. Sept., Seite 356-359
1. Verfasser: Hayashi, Tomoyuki (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Stuchebrukhov, Alexei
Format: Aufsatz
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2011
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Journal of electroanalytical chemistry (Lausanne, Switzerland)
Schlagworte:Journal Article
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Recently, the atomistic details of the electronic wiring of seven Fe/S clusters (N3, N1b, N4, N5, N6a, N6b, N2) of respiratory complex I, along which electrons are injected into the electron transport chain, have been revealed; the tunneling pathways between the clusters and the contributing key residues were identified [1]. In this study, the sensitivity of the electron tunneling pathways to the internal water at the protein subunit boundaries is investigated by simulating tunneling pathways of N3→N1b and N6b→N2 with and without the internal water. It is found that the hydrogen bonding networks formed along the internal water can provide efficient tunneling pathways. In N3→N1b, the tunneling pathway with the internal water is drastically different with significantly shorter (3.4 Å) total tunneling distance along the trajectory. In N6b→N2, the internal water contributes to the tunneling as a bridge between N6b and 9Ile99 with two shorter through-space jumps instead of one longer jump. The resulting enhancement of the rates of the individual electron tunneling process is two to three orders of magnitude. This study demonstrates that the tunneling pathways and tunneling rates are sensitive to the internal water, which suggests that the tunneling pathways can change dynamically due to the diffusion of the internal water, and that the efficient electron tunneling occurs at some specific optimal positions of the internal water
Beschreibung:Date Revised 06.10.2024
published: Print
Citation Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE
ISSN:1572-6657