Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) from bovine heart mitochondria contains 45 different subunits and nine redox cofactors. NADH is oxidized by a noncovalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN), then seven iron-sulfur clusters transfer the two electrons to quinone, and four protons are pumped across the inner mitochondrial membrane. Here, we use protein film voltammetry to investigate the mechanisms of NADH oxidation and NAD+ reduction in the simplest catalytically active subcomplex of complex I, the flavoprotein (Fp) subcomplex. The Fp subcomplex was prepared using chromatography and contained the 51 and 24 kDa subunits, the FMN, one [4Fe-4S] cluster, and one [2Fe-2S] cluster. The reduction potential of the FMN in the enzyme's active site is lower than that of free FMN (thus, the oxidized state of the FMN is most strongly bound) and close to the reduction potential of NAD+. Consequently, the catalytic transformation is reversible. Electrocatalytic NADH oxidation by subcomplex Fp can be explained by a model comprising substrate mass transport, the Michaelis-Menten equation, and interfacial electron transfer kinetics. The difference between the "catalytic" potential and the FMN potential suggests that the flavin is reoxidized before NAD+ is released or that intramolecular electron transfer from the flavin to the [4Fe-4S] cluster influences the catalytic rate. NAD+ reduction displays a marked activity maximum, below which the catalytic rate decreases sharply as the driving force increases. Two possible models reproduce the observed catalytic waveshapes: one describing an effect from reducing the proximal [2Fe-2S] cluster and the other the enhanced catalytic ability of the semiflavin state.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the first enzyme of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. It contains a flavin mononucleotide to oxidize NADH, and eight iron-sulfur clusters. Seven of them transfer electrons between the flavin and the quinone-binding site, and one is on the opposite side of the flavin. Although most information about their properties is from EPR, the spectra from only five clusters have been observed, and it is difficult to match them to the structurally defined clusters. Here, we analyze complex I from bovine mitochondria reacted with a very low potential reductant, to impose a potential approaching -1 V. We compare the spectra with those from higher potentials and from the 24 kDa subunit and flavoprotein subcomplex, and model the spectra by starting from those with fewer components and building the complexity gradually. Spectrum N1a, from the 24 kDa subunit [2Fe-2S] cluster, is not observed in bovine complex I at any potential. Spectrum N1b, from the 75 kDa subunit [2Fe-2S] cluster, exhibits a lower potential than the N3, N4 and N5 spectra of three [4Fe-4S] clusters. In the lowest potential spectra an N5-type spectrum is observed at unusually high temperature (indicating a significant change to the cluster, or that two clusters have very similar g values), the relaxation rate of N1b increases (indicating that a nearby cluster has become reduced) and a new feature with an apparent g value of 2.16 suggests an interaction between two reduced clusters. The consequences of these observations for electron transfer in complex I are discussed.
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