Metal-binding mechanism of Cox17, a copper chaperone for cytochrome c oxidase

Author:

PALUMAA Peep1,KANGUR Liina1,VORONOVA Anastassia1,SILLARD Rannar2

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Gene Technology, Tallinn Technical University, Akadeemia tee 23, EE-12018 Tallinn, Estonia

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Cox17, a copper chaperone for cytochrome c oxidase, is an essential and highly conserved protein. The structure and mechanism of functioning of Cox17 are unknown, and even its metalbinding stoichiometry is elusive. In the present study, we demonstrate, using electrospray ionization–MS, that porcine Cox17 binds co-operatively four Cu+ ions. Cu4Cox17 is stable at pH values above 3 and fluorescence spectra indicate the presence of a solvent-shielded multinuclear Cu(I) cluster. Combining our results with earlier EXAFS results on yeast CuCox17, we suggest that Cu4Cox17 contains a Cu4S6-type cluster. At supramillimolar concentrations, dithiothreitol extracts metals from Cu4Cox17, and an apparent copper dissociation constant KCu=13 fM was calculated from these results. Charge-state distributions of different Cox17 forms suggest that binding of the first Cu+ ion to Cox17 causes a conformational change from an open to a compact state, which may be the rate-limiting step in the formation of Cu4Cox17. Cox17 binds non-co-operatively two Zn2+ ions, but does not bind Ag+ ions, which highlights its extremely high metal-binding specificity. We further demonstrate that porcine Cox17 can also exist in partly oxidized (two disulphide bridges) and fully oxidized (three disulphide bridges) forms. Partly oxidized Cox17 can bind one Cu+ or Zn2+ ion, whereas fully oxidized Cox17 does not bind metals. The metal-binding properties of Cox17 imply that, in contrast with other copper chaperones, Cox17 is designed for the simultaneous transfer of up to four copper ions to partner proteins. Metals can be released from Cox17 by non-oxidative as well as oxidative mechanisms.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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