
Regulation of the proton/electron stoichiometry of mitochondrial ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase by the membrane potential
Author(s) -
BECHMANN Georg,
WEISS Hanns
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1991.tb15722.x
Subject(s) - ubiquinol , chemistry , membrane potential , membrane , electron transfer , cytochrome c , valinomycin , redox , electron transport chain , stoichiometry , cytochrome , biophysics , analytical chemistry (journal) , photochemistry , inorganic chemistry , mitochondrion , biochemistry , coenzyme q – cytochrome c reductase , enzyme , chromatography , biology
The electron transfer reaction catalysed by mitochondrial ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase is linked to the outwards translocation of protons with an H + /e − stoichiometry of 1 under non‐membrane potential condition. The effect of the electrical membrane potential on the H + /e − stoichiometry was investigated. The enzyme was isolated from Neurospora crassa , reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles and electrical membrane potentials of various values were generated across the membranes by means of the valinomycin‐induced potassium‐diffusion method. Using lithium ions as counterions for the intravesicular potassium, the induced membrane potential was stable for minutes and was not significantly changed by the protons ejected by the working enzyme. This allowed the assay of steady‐state reaction rates at pre‐given values of electrical membrane potential. The rate ratio between electron transfer and proton translocation declined from 1 to 0.6 with increase of the membrane potential from 0 to 100 mV. The activity of the quinol/cytochrome c redox reaction followed a parabolic dependence, being activated by low (< 50 mV) potential and inhibited by high (> 100 mV) potential. This apparent non‐linear dependence was interpreted in terms of a linear flow/force relationship plus a membrane‐potential‐dependent slip. Evaluation of the parabolic course by means of a modified linear flow/force relation also indicated a decline of the H + /e − stoichiometry from 1 to 0.5 with increase of the membrane potential from 0 to 120 mV. These observations suggest that the membrane potential controls a change of ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase between two states that have different reaction routes.