FUNCTION OF SUBUNIT ISOFORMS IN CYTOCHROME C OXIDASE
Project Number1R01GM039324-01A4
Contact PI/Project LeaderPOYTON, ROBERT OLIVER
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF COLORADO
Description
Abstract Text
Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is capable of
supplying more than 95% of the total ATP requirement in respiring
eucaryotic cells. It is driven by a respiratory chain composed of
a number of multimeric membrane proteins that act in series to
affect the transfer of electrons from reduced substrates to oxygen.
Previous studies have emphasized the importance of the respiratory
chain itself in regulating oxidative phosphorylation and have
identified cytochrome c oxidase, its terminal member, as a key
enzyme in the overall regulation of cellular energy production.
At present, it is unclear how eucaryotic cells alter their
cytochrome c oxidase activity levels in response to energy demand.
However, the recent discovery of isoforms to the nuclearcoded
subunits of cytochrome c oxidase in many eucaryotes, including
humans, has led to the hypothesis that these polypeptides play a
role in the modulation of cytochrome c oxidase activity. In this
grant we will address this hypothesis. Initially, we will use the
two subunit V isoforms, Va and Vb, of yeast cytochrome c oxidase
as a model. Previous studies have shown that these isoforms affect
some catalytic properties of holocytochrome c oxidase in vivo and
that the expression of their genes, COX5a and COX5b, is
differentially regulated by oxygen. Here, we propose to: 1)
examine the structural-functional basis for the differential
effects of Va and Vb on the electron transport activities of the
holoenzyme; 2) determine if Va and Vb alter the proton pumping
activity of the holoenzyme; 3) identify the domain(s) in Va and Vb
that modulate holoenzyme activities; 4) determine if COX5a and
COX5b are oxygen sensors that regulate the number of holocytochrome
c oxidase molecules that are assembled in vivo; and 5) develop and
use a heterologous complementation system to determine if human
cytochrome c oxidase has subunit isoforms that function like yeast
Va and Vb.
These studies should enhance our understanding of
cellular energetics and cytochrome c oxidase structure-function,
and may provide an assay as well as a molecular basis for
understanding the growing number of human diseases (i.e., tissue
specific myopathies, cardiopathies, and hepatopathies) that are
being linked to defects in cytochrome c oxidase. In addition, they
should provide new opportunities to examine, and possibly modify,
the mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase catalysis.
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