Rimma I. Samoilova
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Rimma I. Samoilova.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Derrick R. J. Kolling; Rimma I. Samoilova; J. Todd Holland; Edward A. Berry; Sergei A. Dikanov; Antony R. Crofts
Pulsed EPR spectroscopy was used to explore the structural neighborhood of the semiquinone (SQ) stabilized at the Qi site of the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides (EC 1.10.2.2) and to demonstrate that the nitrogen atom of a histidine imidazole group donates an H-bond to the SQ. Crystallographic structures show two different configurations for the binding of ubiquinone at the Qi site of mitochondrial bc1 complexes in which histidine (His-201 in bovine sequence) is either a direct H-bond donor or separated by a bridging water. The paramagnetic properties of the SQ formed at the site provide an independent method for studying the liganding of this intermediate species. The antimycin-sensitive SQ formed at the Qi site by either equilibrium redox titration, reduction of the oxidized complex by ascorbate, or addition of decylubihydroquinone to the oxidized complex in the presence of myxothiazol all showed similar properties. The electron spin echo envelope modulation spectra in the 14N region were dominated by lines with frequencies at 1.7 and 3.1 MHz. Hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy spectra showed that these were contributed by a single nitrogen. Further analysis showed that the 14N nucleus was characterized by an isotropic hyperfine coupling of ∼0.8 MHz and a quadrupole coupling constant of ∼0.35 MHz. The nitrogen was identified as the N-ϵ or N-δ imidazole nitrogen of a histidine (it is likely to be His-217, or His-201 in bovine sequence). A distance of 2.5–3.1 Å for the O–N distance between the carbonyl of SQ and the nitrogen was estimated. The mechanistic significance is discussed in the context of a dynamic role for the movement of His-217 in proton transfer to the site.
Methods | 2011
Myat T. Lin; Lindsay J. Sperling; Heather L. Frericks Schmidt; Ming Tang; Rimma I. Samoilova; Takashi Kumasaka; Toshio Iwasaki; Sergei A. Dikanov; Chad M. Rienstra; Robert B. Gennis
Amino-acid selective isotope labeling of proteins offers numerous advantages in mechanistic studies by revealing structural and functional information unattainable from a crystallographic approach. However, efficient labeling of proteins with selected amino acids necessitates auxotrophic hosts, which are often not available. We have constructed a set of auxotrophs in a commonly used Escherichia coli expression strain C43(DE3), a derivative of E. coli BL21(DE3), which can be used for isotopic labeling of individual amino acids or sets of amino acids. These strains have general applicability to either soluble or membrane proteins that can be expressed in E. coli. We present examples in which proteins are selectively labeled with (13)C- and (15)N-amino acids and studied using magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR and pulsed EPR, demonstrating the utility of these strains for biophysical characterization of membrane proteins, radical-generating enzymes and metalloproteins.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Rimma I. Samoilova; Derrick R. J. Kolling; Taketoshi Uzawa; Toshio Iwasaki; Antony R. Crofts; Sergei A. Dikanov
The bifurcated reaction at the Qo-site of the bc 1 complex provides the mechanistic basis of the proton pumping activity through which the complex conserves redox energy in the proton gradient. Structural information about the binding of quinone at the site is lacking, because the site is vacant in crystals of the native complexes. We now report the first structural characterization of the interaction of the native quinone occupant with the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the bc 1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, using high resolution EPR. We have compared the binding configuration in the presence of quinone with the known structures for the complex with stigmatellin and myxothiazol. We have shown by using EPR and orientation-selective electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) measurements of the iron-sulfur protein that when quinone is present in the site, the isotropic hyperfine constant of one of the Nδ atoms of a liganding histidine of the [2Fe-2S] cluster is similar to that observed when stigmatellin is present and different from the configuration in the presence of myxothiazol. The spectra also show complementary differences in nitrogen quadrupole splittings in some orientations. We suggest that the EPR characteristics, the ESEEM spectra, and the hyperfine couplings reflect a similar interaction between the iron-sulfur protein and the quinone or stigmatellin and that the Nδ involved is that of a histidine (equivalent to His-161 in the chicken mitochondrial complex) that forms both a ligand to the cluster and a hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen atom of the Qo-site occupant.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Erik W. Martin; Rimma I. Samoilova; Kupala V. Narasimhulu; Tzu Jen Lin; Patrick J. O'Malley; Colin A. Wraight; Sergei A. Dikanov
In the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the primary (Q(A)) and secondary (Q(B)) electron acceptors are both ubiquinone-10, but with very different properties and functions. To investigate the protein environment that imparts these functional differences, we have applied X-band HYSCORE, a 2D pulsed EPR technique, to characterize the exchangeable protons around the semiquinone (SQ) in the Q(A) and Q(B) sites, using samples of (15)N-labeled reaction centers, with the native high spin Fe(2+) exchanged for diamagnetic Zn(2+), prepared in (1)H(2)O and (2)H(2)O solvent. The powder HYSCORE method is first validated against the orientation-selected Q-band ENDOR study of the Q(A) SQ by Flores et al. (Biophys. J.2007, 92, 671-682), with good agreement for two exchangeable protons with anisotropic hyperfine tensor components, T, both in the range 4.6-5.4 MHz. HYSCORE was then applied to the Q(B) SQ where we found proton lines corresponding to T ≈ 5.2, 3.7 MHz and T ≈ 1.9 MHz. Density functional-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations, employing a model of the Q(B) site, were used to assign the observed couplings to specific hydrogen bonding interactions with the Q(B) SQ. These calculations allow us to assign the T = 5.2 MHz proton to the His-L190 N(δ)H···O(4) (carbonyl) hydrogen bonding interaction. The T = 3.7 MHz spectral feature most likely results from hydrogen bonding interactions of O1 (carbonyl) with both Gly-L225 peptide NH and Ser-L223 hydroxyl OH, which possess calculated couplings very close to this value. The smaller 1.9 MHz coupling is assigned to a weakly bound peptide NH proton of Ile-L224. The calculations performed with this structural model of the Q(B) site show less asymmetric distribution of unpaired spin density over the SQ than seen for the Q(A) site, consistent with available experimental data for (13)C and (17)O carbonyl hyperfine couplings. The implications of these interactions for Q(B) function and comparisons with the Q(A) site are discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Lai Lai Yap; Rimma I. Samoilova; Robert B. Gennis; Sergei A. Dikanov
The cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli resides in the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and four-electron reduction of O2 to water. The one-electron reduced semiquinone forms transiently during the reaction, and the enzyme has been demonstrated to stabilize the semiquinone. Two-dimensional electron spin echo envelope modulation has been applied to explore the exchangeable protons involved in hydrogen bonding to the semiquinone by substitution of 1H2Oby 2H2O. Three exchangeable protons possessing different isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings were identified. The strength of the hyperfine interaction with one proton suggests a significant covalent O–H binding of carbonyl oxygen O1 that is a characteristic of a neutral radical, an assignment that is also supported by the unusually large hyperfine coupling to the methyl protons. The second proton with a large anisotropic coupling also forms a strong hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen. This second hydrogen bond, which has a significant out-of-plane character, is from an NH2 or NH nitrogen, probably from an arginine (Arg-71) known to be in the quinone binding site. Assignment of the third exchangeable proton with smaller anisotropic coupling is more ambiguous, but it is clearly not involved in a direct hydrogen bond with either of the carbonyl oxygens. The results support a model that the semiquinone is bound to the protein in a very asymmetric manner by two strong hydrogen bonds from Asp-75 and Arg-71 to the O1 carbonyl, while the O4 carbonyl is not hydrogen-bonded to the protein.
Biophysical Journal | 2009
A. D. Milov; Rimma I. Samoilova; Yuri D. Tsvetkov; Marta De Zotti; Fernando Formaggio; Claudio Toniolo; Jan-Willem Handgraaf; Jan Raap
PELDOR spectroscopy was exploited to study the self-assembled super-structure of the [Glu(OMe)(7,18,19)]alamethicin molecules in vesicular membranes at peptide to lipid molar ratios in the range of 1:70-1:200. The peptide molecules were site-specifically labeled with TOAC electron spins. From the magnetic dipole-dipole interaction between the nitroxides of the monolabeled constituents and the PELDOR decay patterns measured at 77 K, intermolecular-distance distribution functions were obtained and the number of aggregated molecules (n approximately 4) was estimated. The distance distribution functions exhibit a similar maximum at 2.3 nm. In contrast to Alm16, for Alm1 and Alm8 additional maxima were recorded at 3.2 and approximately 5.2 nm. From ESEEM experiments and based on the membrane polarity profiles, the penetration depths of the different spin-labeled positions into the membrane were qualitatively estimated. It was found that the water accessibility of the spin-labels follows the order TOAC-1 > TOAC-8 approximately TOAC-16. The geometric data obtained are discussed in terms of a penknife molecular model. At least two peptide chains are aligned parallel and eight ester groups of the polar Glu(OMe)(18,19) residues are suggested to stabilize the self-aggregate superstructure.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Lai Lai Yap; Rimma I. Samoilova; Robert B. Gennis; Sergei A. Dikanov
The cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli, and reduces O2 to water. This enzyme has a high affinity quinone binding site (QH), and the quinone bound to this site acts as a cofactor, necessary for rapid electron transfer from substrate ubiquinol, which binds at a separate site (QL), to heme b. Previous pulsed EPR studies have shown that a semiquinone at the QH site formed during the catalytic cycle is a neutral species, with two strong hydrogen bonds to Asp-75 and either Arg-71 or Gln-101. In the current work, pulsed EPR studies have been extended to two mutants at the QH site. The D75E mutation has little influence on the catalytic activity, and the pattern of hydrogen bonding is similar to the wild type. In contrast, the D75H mutant is virtually inactive. Pulsed EPR revealed significant structural changes in this mutant. The hydrogen bond to Arg-71 or Gln-101 that is present in both the wild type and D75E mutant oxidases is missing in the D75H mutant. Instead, the D75H has a single, strong hydrogen bond to a histidine, likely His-75. The D75H mutant stabilizes an anionic form of the semiquinone as a result of the altered hydrogen bond network. Either the redistribution of charge density in the semiquinone species, or the altered hydrogen bonding network is responsible for the loss of catalytic function.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Rimma I. Samoilova; Antony R. Crofts; Sergei A. Dikanov
When the superoxide radical O(2)(•-) is generated on reaction of KO(2) with water in dimethyl sulfoxide, the decay of the radical is dramatically accelerated by inclusion of quinones in the reaction mix. For quinones with no or short hydrophobic tails, the radical product is a semiquinone at much lower yield, likely indicating reduction of quinone by superoxide and loss of most of the semiquinone product by disproportionation. In the presence of ubiquinone-10, a different species (I) is generated, which has the EPR spectrum of superoxide radical. However, pulsed EPR shows spin interaction with protons in fully deuterated solvent, indicating close proximity to the ubinquinone-10. We discuss the nature of species I, and possible roles in the physiological reactions through which ubisemiquinone generates superoxide by reduction of O(2) through bypass reactions in electron transfer chains.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Lai Lai Yap; Myat T. Lin; Hanlin Ouyang; Rimma I. Samoilova; Sergei A. Dikanov; Robert B. Gennis
Cytochrome bo(3) is the major respiratory oxidase located in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli when grown under high oxygen tension. The enzyme catalyzes the 2-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and the 4-electron reduction of dioxygen to water. When solubilized and isolated using dodecylmaltoside, the enzyme contains one equivalent of ubiquinone-8, bound at a high affinity site (Q(H)). The quinone bound at the Q(H) site can form a stable semiquinone, and the amino acid residues which hydrogen bond to the semiquinone have been identified. In the current work, it is shown that the tightly bound ubiquinone-8 at the Q(H) site is not displaced by ubiquinol-1 even during enzyme turnover. Furthermore, the presence of high affinity inhibitors, HQNO and aurachin C1-10, does not displace ubiquinone-8 from the Q(H) site. The data clearly support the existence of a second binding site for ubiquinone, the Q(L) site, which can rapidly exchange with the substrate pool. HQNO is shown to bind to a single site on the enzyme and to prevent formation of the stable ubisemiquinone, though without displacing the bound quinone. Inhibition of the steady state kinetics of the enzyme indicates that aurachin C1-10 may compete for binding with quinol at the Q(L) site while, at the same time, preventing formation of the ubisemiquinone at the Q(H) site. It is suggested that the two quinone binding sites may be adjacent to each other or partially overlap.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Sergei A. Dikanov; J. Todd Holland; Burkhard Endeward; Derrick R. J. Kolling; Rimma I. Samoilova; Thomas F. Prisner; Antony R. Crofts
The ubisemiquinone stabilized at the Qi-site of the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides forms a hydrogen bond with a nitrogen from the local protein environment, tentatively identified as ring N from His-217. The interactions of 14N and 15N have been studied by X-band (∼9.7 GHz) and S-band (3.4 GHz) pulsed EPR spectroscopy. The application of S-band spectroscopy has allowed us to determine the complete nuclear quadrupole tensor of the 14N involved in H-bond formation and to assign it unambiguously to the Nϵ of His-217. This tensor has distinct characteristics in comparison with H-bonds between semiquinones and Nδ in other quinone-processing sites. The experiments with 15N showed that the Nϵ of His-217 was the only nitrogen carrying any considerable unpaired spin density in the ubiquinone environment, and allowed calculation of the isotropic and anisotropic couplings with the Nϵ of His-217. From these data, we could estimate the unpaired spin density transferred onto 2s and 2p orbitals of nitrogen and the distance from the nitrogen to the carbonyl oxygen of 2.38 ± 0.13Å. The hyperfine coupling of other protein nitrogens with semiquinone is <0.1 MHz. This did not exclude the nitrogen of the Asn-221 as a possible hydrogen bond donor to the methoxy oxygen of the semiquinone. A mechanistic role for this residue is supported by kinetic experiments with mutant strains N221T, N221H, N221I, N221S, N221P, and N221D, all of which showed some inhibition but retained partial turnover.