Individual biochemical behaviour versus biological robustness: Spotlight on the regulation of cytochrome c oxidase

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Abstract

During evolution from prokaryotes to eukaryotes, the main function of cytochrome c oxidase (COX), i.e., the coupling of oxygen reduction to proton translocation without the production of ROS (reactive oxygen species) remained unchanged demonstrating its robustness. A new regulation of respiration by the ATP/ADP ratio was introduced in eukaryotes based on nucleotide interaction with the added COX subunit IV. This allosteric ATP-inhibition was proposed to keep the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) at low healthy values and thus prevents the formation of ROS at complexes I and III. ROS have been implicated in various degenerative diseases. The allosteric ATP-inhibition of COX is reversibly switched on and off by phosphorylation of COX at a serine or threonine. In more than 100 individual preparations of rat heart and liver mitochondria, prepared under identical conditions, the extent of allosteric ATP-inhibition varied. This variability correlates with the variable inhibition of uncoupled respiration in intact isolated mitochondria by ATP. It is concluded that in higher organisms the allosteric ATP-inhibition is continually switched on and off by neuronal signalling in order to change oxidative phosphorylation from optimal efficiency with lower rate of ATP synthesis under resting conditions (low ΔΨm and ROS production) to maximal rate of ATP synthesis under active (working, stress) conditions (elevated ΔΨm and ROS production). © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Ramzan, R., Weber, P., Kadenbach, B., & Vogt, S. (2012). Individual biochemical behaviour versus biological robustness: Spotlight on the regulation of cytochrome c oxidase. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 748, 265–281. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-3573-0_11

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