Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Cytochrome c oxidase inhibition by calcium at physiological ionic composition of the medium: Implications for physiological significance of the effect.

Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) from mammalian mitochondria binds Ca2+ and Na+ in a special cation binding site. Binding of Ca2+ brings about partial inhibition of the enzyme while Na+ competes with Ca2+ for the binding site and protects the enzyme from the inhibition [Vygodina, T., Kirichenko, A. and Konstantinov, A.A. (2013). Direct Regulation of Cytochrome c oxidase by Calcium Ions. PLoS One 8(9): e74436]. In the original studies, the inhibition was found to depend significantly on the ionic composition of the buffer. Here we describe inhibition of CcO by Ca2+ in media containing the main ionic components of cytoplasm (150mM KCl, 12mM NaCl and 1mM MgCl2 ). Under these conditions, Ca2+ inhibits CcO with effective Ki of 20-26μM, that is an order of magnitude higher than determined earlier in the absence of Na+ . At physiological value of ionic strength, the inhibition can be observed at any turnover number of CcO, rather than only at low TN (<10s-1 ) as found previously. The inhibition requires partially oxidized state of cytochrome c and is favored by high ionic strength with a sharp transition at 0.1-0.2M. The high Ki =20-26μM found for CcO inhibition by calcium matches closely the known value of "Km " for Ca2+ -induced activation of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter. The inhibition of CcO by Ca2+ is proposed to modulate mitochondrial Ca2+ -uptake via the mitochondrial calcium uniporter, promote permeability transition pore opening and induce reduction of Mia40 in the mitochondrial intermembrane space.

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