Lateral diffusion of ubiquinone during electron transfer in phospholipid- and ubiquinone-enriched mitochondrial membranes
- PMID: 6286674
Lateral diffusion of ubiquinone during electron transfer in phospholipid- and ubiquinone-enriched mitochondrial membranes
Abstract
After fusion of small unilamellar phospholipid liposomes with mitochondrial inner membranes, the rate of electron transfer between membrane dehydrogenases and cytochrome c decreases as the average distance between integral membrane proteins increases, suggesting that electron transfer is mediated through a diffusional process in the membrane plane (Schneider, H., Lemasters, J. J., Höchli, M., and Hackenbrock, C. R. (1980)., J. Biol. Chem. 255, 3748-3756). The role of ubiquinone in this process was evaluated by fusing liposomes containing ubiquinone-10 or ubiquinone-6, with inner membranes. In control membranes enriched with phospholipid only, ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase and NADH- and succinate-cytochrome c reductase activities decreased proportionally to the increase in bilayer lipid. These decreases were restored substantially in phospholipid plus ubiquinone-supplemented membranes. The degree to which restoration occurred was dependent upon the length of the isoprenoid side chain of the ubiquinone with the shorter chain length ubiquinone-6, always giving greater restoration than ubiquinone-10. It is concluded that electron transfer between flavin-linked dehydrogenases (Complexes I and II) and cytochrome bc1 (Complex III) occurs by independent, lateral diffusion of ubiquinone as well as independent, lateral diffusion of ubiquinone as well as the protein complexes within the plane of the membrane.
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