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CATALYSIS, INHIBITION, AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION BY MENAQUINOL:FUMARATE OXIDOREDUCTASE

Complex II superfamily members catalyze two separate reactions in respiration: interconversion of fumarate and succinate in the soluble milieu and interconversion of quinol and quinone in the membrane. Electrons liberated as a result of one reaction become substrates for the second, thermodynamically linking both sites and allowing complex II enzymes to catalyze electron entry to or exit from a respiratory chain. In anaerobic respiration, menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (QFR) catalyzes the final step in the most widely used anaerobic respiratory pathway, fumarate reduction. This work analyzes structural and mechanistic details of function and inhibition at each of the two active sites.
The first part examines transition state formation at the active site responsible for fumarate and succinate interconversion, the dicarboxylate site. It was found that two threonine residues, Thr-234 and Thr-244, might play important roles in attaining and stabilizing the transition state. The second part of this work focuses on details of dicarboxylate site inhibition by substrate-like molecules and of substrate activation. It was found that all tight binding ligands or ligands transformed by the enzyme also induce large optical shifts in an FAD cofactor and align an activatable bond along the active C4a-N5 axis of FAD. This bond overlap was proposed to play a part of an orbital steering mechanism to guide substrate and activate it for catalysis. This alignment was found be conserved in a number of flavoenzymes that catalyze dehydrogenation reactions, even with completely unrelated substrates and structural folds.
The third part of this work focuses on the second active site, the quinone/quinol interconversion site. The E29L variant QFR was crystallized to study semiquinone formation. Preliminary results reveal that the substrate, menaquinone, may bind in a continuum of active site positions as the substrate undergoes catalysis. Another substrate, ubiquinone was shown to bring about the presence of strong electron density at a site located 13 angstroms away from menaquinone site. The forth and final part of this work examines the structural work done to isolate and stabilize complex formation between QFR and FliG, a part of the flagellar motor.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VANDERBILT/oai:VANDERBILTETD:etd-02142011-170623
Date21 February 2011
CreatorsTomasiak, Thomas
ContributorsH. Alex Brown, Tina Iverson, Heidi Hamm, Hassane Mchaourab, Jens Meiler
PublisherVANDERBILT
Source SetsVanderbilt University Theses
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-02142011-170623/
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