The Whole Structure of the 13-Subunit Oxidized Cytochrome c Oxidase at
2.5 A Tomitake Tsukihara, Hiroshi Aoyama, Eiki Yamashita, Takashi
Tomizaki, Hiroshi Yamaguchi, Kyoko Shinzawa-ltoh, Ryosuke Nakashima, Rieko
Yaono & Shinya Yoshikawa. Science 272 (1996) 1136-1144
SUMMARY: The crystal structure of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase
at 2.8 A resolution with an R value of 19.9 percent reveals 13 subunits,
each different from the other, five phosphatidyl ethanolamines, three
phosphatidyl glycerols and two cholates, two hemes A and three copper, one
magnesium, and one zinc. Of 3606 amino acid residues in the dimer, 3560
have been converged to a reasonable structure by refinement. A
hydrogen-bonded system, including a propionate of a heme A (heme a), part
of peptide backbone, and an imidazole ligand of CuA, could provide an
electron transfer pathway between CuA and heme a. Two possible proton
pathways for pumping, each spanning from the matrix to the cytosolic
surfaces, were identified, including hydrogen bonds, internal cavities
likely to contain water molecules, and structures that could form hydrogen
bonds with small possible conformational change of amino acid side chains.
Possible channels for chemical protons to produce H2O, for removing the
produced water, and for O2, respectively, were identified.