Megacomplex organization of the oxidative phosphorylation system by structural analysis of respiratory supercomplexes from potato

authored by
Jelle B. Bultema, Hans Peter Braun, Egbert J. Boekema, Roman Kouřil
Abstract

The individual protein complexes of the oxidative phosphorylation system (OXPHOS complexes I to V) specifically interact and form defined supramolecular structures, the so-called "respiratory supercomplexes". Some supercomplexes appear to associate into larger structures, or megacomplexes, such as a string of dimeric ATP synthase (complex V2). A row-like organization of OXPHOS complexes I, III and IV into respiratory strings has also been proposed. These transient strings cannot be purified after detergent solubilization. Hence the shape and composition of the respiratory string was approached by an extensive structural characterization of all its possible building blocks, which are the supercomplexes. About 400,000 molecular projections of supercomplexes from potato mitochondria were processed by single particle electron microscopy. We obtained two-dimensional projection maps of at least five different supercomplexes, including the supercomplex I + III2, III2 + IV1, V2, I + III2 + IV1 and I2 + III2 in different types of position. From these maps the relative position of the individual complexes in the largest unit, the I2 + III2 + IV2 supercomplex, could be determined in a coherent way. The maps also show that the I + III2 + IV1 supercomplex, or respirasome, differs from its counterpart in bovine mitochondria. The new structural features allow us to propose a consistent model of the respiratory string, composed of repeating I2 + III2 + IV2 units, which is in agreement with dimensions observed in former freeze-fracture electron microscopy data.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Plant Genetics
External Organisation(s)
University of Groningen
Type
Article
Journal
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Bioenergetics
Volume
1787
Pages
60-67
No. of pages
8
ISSN
0005-2728
Publication date
13.11.2008
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Biophysics, Biochemistry, Cell Biology
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbabio.2008.10.010 (Access: Open)