» Articles » PMID: 35643148

Electric Field-induced Functional Changes in Electrode-immobilized Mutant Species of Human Cytochrome C

Abstract

Post-translational modifications and naturally occurring mutations of cytochrome c have been recognized as a regulatory mechanism to control its biology. In this work, we investigate the effect of such in vivo chemical modifications of human cytochrome c on its redox properties in the adsorbed state onto an electrode. In particular, tyrosines 48 and 97 have been replaced by the non-canonical amino acid p-carboxymethyl-L-phenylalanine (pCMF), thus mimicking tyrosine phosphorylation. Additionally, tyrosine 48 has been replaced by a histidine producing the natural Y48H pathogenic mutant. Thermodynamics and kinetics of the interfacial electron transfer of wild-type cytochrome c and herein produced variants, adsorbed electrostatically under different local interfacial electric fields, were determined by means of variable temperature cyclic film voltammetry. It is shown that non-native cytochrome c variants immobilized under a low interfacial electric field display redox thermodynamics and kinetics similar to those of wild-type cytochrome c. However, upon increasing the strength of the electric field, the redox thermodynamics and kinetics of the modified proteins markedly differ from those of the wild-type species. The mutations promote stabilization of the oxidized form and a significant increase in the activation enthalpy values that can be ascribed to a subtle distortion of the heme cofactor and/or difference of the amino acid rearrangements rather than to a coarse protein structural change. Overall, these results point to a combined effect of the single point mutations at positions 48 and 97 and the strength of electrostatic binding on the regulatory mechanism of mitochondrial membrane activity, when acting as a redox shuttle protein.

Citing Articles

Cardiac Tyrosine 97 Phosphorylation of Cytochrome Regulates Respiration and Apoptosis.

Morse P, Pasupathi V, Vuljaj S, Yazdi N, Zurek M, Wan J Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(3).

PMID: 39941082 PMC: 11818311. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26031314.


Phosphorylation of cytochrome c at tyrosine 48 finely regulates its binding to the histone chaperone SET/TAF-Iβ in the nucleus.

Tamargo-Azpilicueta J, Casado-Combreras M, Giner-Arroyo R, Velazquez-Campoy A, Marquez I, Olloqui-Sariego J Protein Sci. 2024; 33(12):e5213.

PMID: 39548742 PMC: 11568366. DOI: 10.1002/pro.5213.


Effect of Electric Field on α-Synuclein Fibrils: Revealed by Molecular Dynamics Simulations.

Razzokov J, Fazliev S, Makhkamov M, Marimuthu P, Baev A, Kurganov E Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(7).

PMID: 37047286 PMC: 10094641. DOI: 10.3390/ijms24076312.


Accelerated Evolution of Cytochrome in Higher Primates, and Regulation of the Reaction between Cytochrome and Cytochrome Oxidase by Phosphorylation.

Brand S, Scharlau M, Geren L, Hendrix M, Parson C, Elmendorf T Cells. 2022; 11(24).

PMID: 36552779 PMC: 9777161. DOI: 10.3390/cells11244014.