Sany Rajagukguk
San Francisco VA Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Sany Rajagukguk.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Kunhong Xiao; Gregory Engstrom; Sany Rajagukguk; Chang-An Yu; Linda Yu; Bill Durham; Francis Millett
Famoxadone is a new cytochromebc 1 Qo site inhibitor that immobilizes the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) in the bconformation. The effects of famoxadone on electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center (2Fe-2S) and cyt c 1 were studied using a ruthenium dimer to photoinitiate the reaction. The rate constant for electron transfer in the forward direction from 2Fe-2S to cyt c 1 was found to be 16,000 s−1in bovine cyt bc 1. Binding famoxadone decreased this rate constant to 1,480 s−1, consistent with a decrease in mobility of the ISP. Reverse electron transfer from cytc 1 to 2Fe-2S was found to be biphasic in bovine cyt bc 1 with rate constants of 90,000 and 7,300 s−1. In the presence of famoxadone, reverse electron transfer was monophasic with a rate constant of 1,420 s−1. It appears that the rate constants for the release of the oxidized and reduced ISP from the b conformation are the same in the presence of famoxadone. The effects of famoxadone binding on electron transfer were also studied in a series of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cyt bc 1 mutants involving residues at the interface between the Rieske protein and cytc 1 and/or cyt b.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Francis Millett; Jeffrey Havens; Sany Rajagukguk; Bill Durham
The cytochrome bc1 complex (ubiquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) is the central integral membrane protein in the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as the electron-transfer chains of many respiratory and photosynthetic prokaryotes. Based on X-ray crystallographic studies of cytochrome bc1, a mechanism has been proposed in which the extrinsic domain of the iron-sulfur protein first binds to cytochrome b where it accepts an electron from ubiquinol in the Qo site, and then rotates by 57° to a position close to cytochrome c1 where it transfers an electron to cytochrome c1. This review describes the development of a ruthenium photooxidation technique to measure key electron transfer steps in cytochrome bc1, including rapid electron transfer from the iron-sulfur protein to cytochrome c1. It was discovered that this reaction is rate-limited by the rotational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein rather than true electron transfer. A conformational linkage between the occupant of the Qo ubiquinol binding site and the rotational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein was discovered which could play a role in the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. A ruthenium photoexcitation method is also described for the measurement of electron transfer from cytochrome c1 to cytochrome c. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Respiratory Complex III and related bc complexes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Elena Maklashina; Sany Rajagukguk; Chrystal A. Starbird; W. Hayes McDonald; Anna Koganitsky; Michael Eisenbach; Tina M. Iverson; Gary Cecchini
Escherichia coli harbors two highly conserved homologs of the essential mitochondrial respiratory complex II (succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase). Aerobically the bacterium synthesizes succinate:quinone reductase as part of its respiratory chain, whereas under microaerophilic conditions, the quinol:fumarate reductase can be utilized. All complex II enzymes harbor a covalently bound FAD co-factor that is essential for their ability to oxidize succinate. In eukaryotes and many bacteria, assembly of the covalent flavin linkage is facilitated by a small protein assembly factor, termed SdhE in E. coli. How SdhE assists with formation of the covalent flavin bond and how it binds the flavoprotein subunit of complex II remain unknown. Using photo-cross-linking, we report the interaction site between the flavoprotein of complex II and the SdhE assembly factor. These data indicate that SdhE binds to the flavoprotein between two independently folded domains and that this binding mode likely influences the interdomain orientation. In so doing, SdhE likely orients amino acid residues near the dicarboxylate and FAD binding site, which facilitates formation of the covalent flavin linkage. These studies identify how the conserved SdhE assembly factor and its homologs participate in complex II maturation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Prashant K. Singh; Maruf Sarwar; Elena Maklashina; Violetta Kotlyar; Sany Rajagukguk; Thomas M. Tomasiak; Gary Cecchini; Tina M. Iverson
Background: Different quinone substrates are used by complex II. Results: Structural and kinetic analyses show that two arginine residues modulate the enzyme interaction with different quinones. Conclusion: Specific arginines compensate for each other in proton transfer during quinone oxidoreduction in the complex II homolog fumarate reductase. Significance: Plasticity in quinone binding may be important for bioenergetic transformations. Respiratory processes often use quinone oxidoreduction to generate a transmembrane proton gradient, making the 2H+/2e− quinone chemistry important for ATP synthesis. There are a variety of quinones used as electron carriers between bioenergetic proteins, and some respiratory proteins can functionally interact with more than one quinone type. In the case of complex II homologs, which couple quinone chemistry to the interconversion of succinate and fumarate, the redox potentials of the biologically available ubiquinone and menaquinone aid in driving the chemical reaction in one direction. In the complex II homolog quinol:fumarate reductase, it has been demonstrated that menaquinol oxidation requires at least one proton shuttle, but many of the remaining mechanistic details of menaquinol oxidation are not fully understood, and little is known about ubiquinone reduction. In the current study, structural and computational studies suggest that the sequential removal of the two menaquinol protons may be accompanied by a rotation of the naphthoquinone ring to optimize the interaction with a second proton shuttling pathway. However, kinetic measurements of site-specific mutations of quinol:fumarate reductase variants show that ubiquinone reduction does not use the same pathway. Computational docking of ubiquinone followed by mutagenesis instead suggested redundant proton shuttles lining the ubiquinone-binding site or from direct transfer from solvent. These data show that the quinone-binding site provides an environment that allows multiple amino acid residues to participate in quinone oxidoreduction. This suggests that the quinone-binding site in complex II is inherently plastic and can robustly interact with different types of quinones.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010
Elena Maklashina; Sany Rajagukguk; William S. McIntire; Gary Cecchini
A b-type heme is conserved in membrane-bound complex II enzymes (SQR, succinate-ubiquinone reductase). The axial ligands for the low spin heme b in Escherichia coli complex II are SdhC His84 and SdhD His71. E. coli SdhD His71 is separated by 10 residues from SdhD Asp82 and Tyr83 which are essential for ubiquinone catalysis. The same His-10x-AspTyr motif dominates in homologous SdhD proteins, except for Saccharomyces cerevisiae where a tyrosine is at the axial position (Tyr-Cys-9x-AspTyr). Nevertheless, the yeast enzyme was suggested to contain a stoichiometric amount of heme, however, with the Cys ligand in the aforementioned motif acting as heme ligand. In this report, the role of Cys residues for heme coordination in the complex II family of enzymes is addressed. Cys was substituted to the SdhD-71 position and the yeast Tyr71Cys72 motif was also recreated. The Cys71 variant retained heme, although it was high spin, while the Tyr71Cys72 mutant lacked heme. Previously the presence of heme in S. cerevisiae was detected by a spectral peak in fumarate-oxidized, dithionite-reduced mitochondria. Here it is shown that this method must be used with caution. Comparison of bovine and yeast mitochondrial membranes shows that fumarate induced reoxidation of cytochromes in both SQR and the bc1 complex (ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase). Thus, this report raises a concern about the presence of low spin heme b in S. cerevisiae complex II.
Biochemistry | 2014
Robert F. Anderson; Sujata S. Shinde; Russ Hille; Richard A. Rothery; Joel H. Weiner; Sany Rajagukguk; Elena Maklashina; Gary Cecchini
Single electron transfers have been examined in complex II (succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) by the method of pulse radiolysis. Electrons are introduced into the enzyme initially at the [3Fe–4S] and ubiquinone sites followed by intramolecular equilibration with the b heme of the enzyme. To define thermodynamic and other controlling parameters for the pathways of electron transfer in complex II, site-directed variants were constructed and analyzed. Variants at SdhB-His207 and SdhB-Ile209 exhibit significantly perturbed electron transfer between the [3Fe–4S] cluster and ubiquinone. Analysis of the data using Marcus theory shows that the electronic coupling constants for wild-type and variant enzyme are all small, indicating that electron transfer occurs by diabatic tunneling. The presence of the ubiquinone is necessary for efficient electron transfer to the heme, which only slowly equilibrates with the [3Fe–4S] cluster in the absence of the quinone.
Biochemistry | 2003
Gregory Engstrom; Ray Rajagukguk; Aleister J. Saunders; Chetan N. Patel; Sany Rajagukguk; Kunhong Xiao; Gary J. Pielak; Bernard L. Trumpower; Chang An Yu; Linda Yu; Bill Durham; Francis Millett
Biochemistry | 2007
Sue Ellen Brand; Sany Rajagukguk; Krithika Ganesan; Lois Geren; Marian Fabian; Dan Han; Robert B. Gennis; Bill Durham; Francis Millett
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Dmitry Zaslavsky; Robert C. Sadoski; Sany Rajagukguk; Lois Geren; Francis Millett; Bill Durham; Robert B. Gennis
Biochemistry | 2007
Sany Rajagukguk; Shaoqing Yang; Chang-An Yu; Linda Yu; Bill Durham; Francis Millett