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Phosphorylation of Cytochrome c Threonine 28 Regulates Electron Transport Chain Activity in Kidney: IMPLICATIONS FOR AMP KINASE

Authors :
Gargi, Mahapatra
Ashwathy, Varughese
Qinqin, Ji
Icksoo, Lee
Jenney, Liu
Asmita, Vaishnav
Christopher, Sinkler
Alexandr A, Kapralov
Carlos T, Moraes
Thomas H, Sanderson
Timothy L, Stemmler
Lawrence I, Grossman
Valerian E, Kagan
Joseph S, Brunzelle
Arthur R, Salomon
Brian F P, Edwards
Maik, Hüttemann
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry. 292(1)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Mammalian cytochrome c (Cytc) plays a key role in cellular life and death decisions, functioning as an electron carrier in the electron transport chain and as a trigger of apoptosis when released from the mitochondria. However, its regulation is not well understood. We show that the major fraction of Cytc isolated from kidneys is phosphorylated on Thr28, leading to a partial inhibition of respiration in the reaction with cytochrome c oxidase. To further study the effect of Cytc phosphorylation in vitro, we generated T28E phosphomimetic Cytc, revealing superior behavior regarding protein stability and its ability to degrade reactive oxygen species compared with wild-type unphosphorylated Cytc. Introduction of T28E phosphomimetic Cytc into Cytc knock-out cells shows that intact cell respiration, mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), and ROS levels are reduced compared with wild type. As we show by high resolution crystallography of wild-type and T28E Cytc in combination with molecular dynamics simulations, Thr28 is located at a central position near the heme crevice, the most flexible epitope of the protein apart from the N and C termini. Finally, in silico prediction and our experimental data suggest that AMP kinase, which phosphorylates Cytc on Thr28 in vitro and colocalizes with Cytc to the mitochondrial intermembrane space in the kidney, is the most likely candidate to phosphorylate Thr28 in vivo. We conclude that Cytc phosphorylation is mediated in a tissue-specific manner and leads to regulation of electron transport chain flux via “controlled respiration,” preventing ΔΨm hyperpolarization, a known cause of ROS and trigger of apoptosis.

Details

ISSN :
1083351X
Volume :
292
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........937ccb6150589aa05c3ead8083c99e8a