Biophys Physicobiol. 2021 ;18
186-195
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), a terminal oxidase in the respiratory chain, catalyzes the reduction of O2 to water coupled with the proton pump across the membrane. Mitochondrial CcO exists in monomeric and dimeric forms, and as a monomer as part of the respiratory supercomplex, although the enzymatic reaction proceeds in the CcO monomer. Recent biochemical and crystallographic studies of monomeric and dimeric CcOs have revealed functional and structural differences among them. In solubilized mitochondrial membrane, the monomeric form is dominant, and a small amount of dimer is observed. The activity of the monomeric CcO is higher than that of the dimer, suggesting that the monomer is the active form. In the structure of monomeric CcO, a hydrogen bond network of water molecules is formed at the entrance of the proton transfer K-pathway, and in dimeric CcO, this network is altered by a cholate molecule binding between monomers. The specific binding of the cholate molecule at the dimer interface suggests that the binding of physiological ligands similar in size or shape to cholate could also trigger dimer formation as a physiological standby form. Because the dimer interface also contains weak interactions of nonspecifically bound lipid molecules, hydrophobic interactions between the transmembrane helices, and a Met-Met interaction between the extramembrane regions, these interactions could support the stabilization of the standby form. Structural analyses also suggest that hydrophobic interactions of cardiolipins bound to the trans-membrane surface of CcO are involved in forming the supercomplex.
Keywords: cholate; complex IV; lipid; mitochondria; respiratory chain