Repository logo
 

Structure of the deactive state of mammalian respiratory complex I

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Blaza, James N 
Vinothkumar, Kutti R 

Abstract

Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is central to energy metabolism in mammalian mitochondria. It couples NADH oxidation by ubiquinone to proton transport across the energy-conserving inner membrane, catalyzing respiration and driving ATP synthesis. In the absence of substrates, ‘active’ complex I gradually enters a pronounced resting or ‘deactive’ state. The active-deactive transition occurs during ischemia and is crucial for controlling how respiration recovers upon reperfusion. Here, we set a highly-active preparation of Bos taurus complex I into the biochemically-defined deactive state, and used single-particle electron cryomicroscopy to determine its structure to 4.1 Å resolution. We show that the deactive state arises when critical structural elements that form the ubiquinone-binding site become disordered, and we propose reactivation is induced when substrate binding to the NADH-reduced enzyme templates their reordering. Our structure both rationalizes biochemical data on the deactive state, and offers new insights into its physiological and cellular roles.

Description

Keywords

disordered protein structure, electron transport chain, cryo-EM, membrane protein, mitochondria, NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, PEGylated gold grid

Journal Title

Structure

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0969-2126
1878-4186

Volume Title

26

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_U105663141)
MRC (MC_UU_00015/2)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/7)
Data were recorded at the UK National Electron Bio-Imaging Centre (eBIC) at Diamond (proposal EM13581, funded by the Wellcome Trust, MRC and BBSRC) with help from Dan Clare and Alistair Siebert. This work was supported by The Medical Research Council, grant numbers U105663141 (to J.H.) and U105184322 (K.R.V. in R. Henderson's group).
Relationships
Is derived from: