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Featured researches published by Lina Salomonsson.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Mapping protein dynamics in catalytic intermediates of the redox-driven proton pump cytochrome c oxidase

Laura S. Busenlehner; Lina Salomonsson; Peter Brzezinski; Richard N. Armstrong

Redox-driven proton pumps such as cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) are fundamental elements of the energy transduction machinery in biological systems. CcO is an integral membrane protein that acts as the terminal electron acceptor in respiratory chains of aerobic organisms, catalyzing the four-electron reduction of O2 to H2O. This reduction also requires four protons taken from the cytosolic or negative side of the membrane, with an additional uptake of four protons that are pumped across the membrane. Therefore, the proton pump must embody a “gate,” which provides alternating access of protons to one or the other side of the membrane but never both sides simultaneously. However, the exact mechanism of proton translocation through CcO remains unknown at the molecular level. Understanding pump function requires knowledge of the nature and location of these structural changes that is often difficult to access with crystallography or NMR spectroscopy. In this paper, we demonstrate, with amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange MS, that transitions between catalytic intermediates in CcO are orchestrated with opening and closing of specific proton pathways, providing an alternating access for protons to the two sides of the membrane. An analysis of these results in the framework of the 3D structure of CcO indicate the spatial location of a gate, which controls the unidirectional proton flux through the enzyme and points to a mechanism by which CcO energetically couples electron transfer to proton translocation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Surface-coupled proton exchange of a membrane-bound proton acceptor

Tor Sandén; Lina Salomonsson; Peter Brzezinski; Jerker Widengren

Proton-transfer reactions across and at the surface of biological membranes are central for maintaining the transmembrane proton electrochemical gradients involved in cellular energy conversion. In this study, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy was used to measure the local protonation and deprotonation rates of single pH-sensitive fluorophores conjugated to liposome membranes, and the dependence of these rates on lipid composition and ion concentration. Measurements of proton exchange rates over a wide proton concentration range, using two different pH-sensitive fluorophores with different pKas, revealed two distinct proton exchange regimes. At high pH (> 8), proton association increases rapidly with increasing proton concentrations, presumably because the whole membrane acts as a proton-collecting antenna for the fluorophore. In contrast, at low pH (< 7), the increase in the proton association rate is slower and comparable to that of direct protonation of the fluorophore from the bulk solution. In the latter case, the proton exchange rates of the two fluorophores are indistinguishable, indicating that their protonation rates are determined by the local membrane environment. Measurements on membranes of different surface charge and at different ion concentrations made it possible to determine surface potentials, as well as the distance between the surface and the fluorophore. The results from this study define the conditions under which biological membranes can act as proton-collecting antennae and provide fundamental information on the relation between the membrane surface charge density and the local proton exchange kinetics.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Impaired proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase upon structural alteration of the D pathway

Håkan Lepp; Lina Salomonsson; Jia Peng Zhu; Robert B. Gennis; Peter Brzezinski

Cytochrome c oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme, which catalyses the one-electron oxidation of four molecules of cytochrome c and the four-electron reduction of O(2) to water. Electron transfer through the enzyme is coupled to proton pumping across the membrane. Protons that are pumped as well as those that are used for O(2) reduction are transferred though a specific intraprotein (D) pathway. Results from earlier studies have shown that replacement of residue Asn139 by an Asp, at the beginning of the D pathway, results in blocking proton pumping without slowing uptake of substrate protons used for O(2) reduction. Furthermore, introduction of the acidic residue results in an increase of the apparent pK(a) of E286, an internal proton donor to the catalytic site, from 9.4 to ~11. In this study we have investigated intramolecular electron and proton transfer in a mutant cytochrome c oxidase in which a neutral residue, Thr, was introduced at the 139 site. The mutation results in uncoupling of proton pumping from O(2) reduction, but a decrease in the apparent pK(a) of E286 from 9.4 to 7.6. The data provide insights into the mechanism by which cytochrome c oxidase pumps protons and the structural elements involved in this process.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Deuterium isotope effect of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase

Lina Salomonsson; Gisela Brändén; Peter Brzezinski

In mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain where it catalyses the reduction of oxygen to water. The free energy released in this process is used to translocate (pump) protons across the membrane such that each electron transfer to the catalytic site is accompanied by proton pumping. To investigate the mechanism of electron-proton coupling in cytochrome c oxidase we have studied the pH-dependence of the kinetic deuterium isotope effect of specific reaction steps associated with proton transfer in wild-type and structural variants of cytochrome c oxidases in which amino-acid residues in proton-transfer pathways have been modified. In addition, we have solved the structure of one of these mutant enzymes, where a key component of the proton-transfer machinery, Glu286, was modified to an Asp. The results indicate that the P3-->F3 transition rate is determined by a direct proton-transfer event to the catalytic site. In contrast, the rate of the F3-->O4 transition, which involves simultaneous electron transfer to the catalytic site and is characteristic of any transition during CytcO turnover, is determined by two events with similar rates and different kinetic isotope effects. These reaction steps involve transfer of protons, that are pumped, via a segment of the protein including Glu286 and Arg481.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Proton transfer in the quinol-dependent nitric oxide reductase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus during reduction of oxygen

Lina Salomonsson; Joachim Reimann; Takehiko Tosha; Nils Krause; Nathalie Gonska; Yoshitsugu Shiro; Pia Ädelroth

Bacterial nitric oxide reductases (NOR) are integral membrane proteins that catalyse the reduction of nitric oxide to nitrous oxide, often as a step in the process of denitrification. Most functional data has been obtained with NORs that receive their electrons from a soluble cytochrome c in the periplasm and are hence termed cNOR. Very recently, the structure of a different type of NOR, the quinol-dependent (q)-NOR from the thermophilic bacterium Geobacillus stearothermophilus was solved to atomic resolution [Y. Matsumoto, T. Tosha, A.V. Pisliakov, T. Hino, H. Sugimoto, S. Nagano, Y. Sugita and Y. Shiro, Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 19 (2012) 238-246]. In this study, we have investigated the reaction between this qNOR and oxygen. Our results show that, like some cNORs, the G. stearothermophilus qNOR is capable of O(2) reduction with a turnover of ~3electronss(-1) at 40°C. Furthermore, using the so-called flow-flash technique, we show that the fully reduced (with three available electrons) qNOR reacts with oxygen in a reaction with a time constant of 1.8ms that oxidises the low-spin heme b. This reaction is coupled to proton uptake from solution and presumably forms a ferryl intermediate at the active site. The pH dependence of the reaction is markedly different from a corresponding reaction in cNOR from Paracoccus denitrificans, indicating that possibly the proton uptake mechanism and/or pathway differs between qNOR and cNOR. This study furthermore forms the basis for investigation of the proton transfer pathway in qNOR using both variants with putative proton transfer elements modified and measurements of the vectorial nature of the proton transfer. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 17th European Bioenergetics Conference (EBEC 2012).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

The timing of proton migration in membrane-reconstituted cytochrome c oxidase

Lina Salomonsson; Kristina Faxén; Pia Ädelroth; Peter Brzezinski


Biochemistry | 2003

Subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides is required to maintain rapid proton uptake through the D pathway at physiologic pH.

Gwen Gilderson; Lina Salomonsson; Anna Aagaard; Jimmy Gray; Peter Brzezinski; Jonathan P. Hosler


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

A single-amino-acid lid renders a gas-tight compartment within a membrane-bound transporter

Lina Salomonsson; Alex K. Y. Lee; Robert B. Gennis; Peter Brzezinski


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006

Inhibition of proton pumping by zinc ions during specific reaction steps in cytochrome c oxidase

Kristina Faxén; Lina Salomonsson; Pia Ädelroth; Peter Brzezinski


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Proton transfer in NO-reducing heme-copper oxidases

Pia Ädelroth; Josy ter Beek; Hyun Ju Lee; Nathalie Gonska; Lina Salomonsson; Davinia Arjona; Joachim Reimann

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