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High-resolution cryo-EM structures of respiratory complex I: Mechanism, assembly, and disease
(2019)
Respiratory complex I is a redox-driven proton pump, accounting for a large part of the electrochemical gradient that powers mitochondrial adenosine triphosphate synthesis. Complex I dysfunction is associated with severe human diseases. Assembly of the one-megadalton complex I in the inner mitochondrial membrane requires assembly factors and chaperones. We have determined the structure of complex I from the aerobic yeast Yarrowia lipolytica by electron cryo-microscopy at 3.2-Å resolution. A ubiquinone molecule was identified in the access path to the active site. The electron cryo-microscopy structure indicated an unusual lipid-protein arrangement at the junction of membrane and matrix arms that was confirmed by molecular simulations. The structure of a complex I mutant and an assembly intermediate provide detailed molecular insights into the cause of a hereditary complex I-linked disease and complex I assembly in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
Proton-pumping complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain is among the largest and most complex membrane protein complexes. The enzyme contributes substantially to oxidative energy-conversion in eukaryotic cells. Its malfunctions are implicated in many hereditary and degenerative disorders. Here, we report the X-ray structure of mitochondrial complex I at 3.6- 3.9 Å resolution describing in detail the central subunits that execute the bioenergetic function. A continuous axis of basic and acidic residues running centrally through the membrane arm connects the ubiquinone reduction site in the hydrophilic arm to four putative proton-pumping units. The binding position for a substrate analogous inhibitor and blockage of the predicted ubiquinone binding site provide a model for the ‘deactive’ form of the enzyme. The proposed transition into the active form is based on a concerted structural rearrangement at the ubiquinone reduction site rendering support for a two-state stabilization-change mechanism of protonpumping.