Superfamily includes proteins containing domains which bind to iron-sulfur clusters. Members include bacterial ferredoxins, various dehydrogenases, and various reductases. Structure of the domain is an alpha-antiparallel beta sandwich. Domain contai ...
Superfamily includes proteins containing domains which bind to iron-sulfur clusters. Members include bacterial ferredoxins, various dehydrogenases, and various reductases. Structure of the domain is an alpha-antiparallel beta sandwich. Domain contains two 4Fe4S clusters.
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associa ...
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associated with proton translocation across the membrane, and in this context is a combination predominantly of subunits 2, 4, 5, 14, L, M and N [1]. In many bacterial species these proteins are probable stand-alone transporters not coupled with oxidoreduction [2].
This entry represents a carboxyl terminal extension of Pfam:PF00361. It includes subunit 5 from chloroplasts, and bacterial subunit L. This sub-family is part of complex I which catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a re ...
This entry represents a carboxyl terminal extension of Pfam:PF00361. It includes subunit 5 from chloroplasts, and bacterial subunit L. This sub-family is part of complex I which catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associated with proton translocation across the membrane. This family is largely a few TM regions of the F subunit of NADH-Ubiquinone oxidoreductase from plants. The TMs form part of the anti-porter subunit.
This entry represents an amino terminal extension of Pfam:PF00361. Only NADH-Ubiquinone chain 5 and eubacterial chain L are in this family. This sub-family is part of complex I which catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in ...
This entry represents an amino terminal extension of Pfam:PF00361. Only NADH-Ubiquinone chain 5 and eubacterial chain L are in this family. This sub-family is part of complex I which catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associated with proton translocation across the membrane.
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associa ...
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associated with proton translocation across the membrane, and in this context is a combination predominantly of subunits 2, 4, 5, 14, L, M and N [1]. In many bacterial species these proteins are probable stand-alone transporters not coupled with oxidoreduction [2].
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associa ...
This entry includes membrane transporters and represents some 7 of potentially 14-16 TM regions. In many instances, its members forms part of complex I that catalyses the transfer of two electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in a reaction that is associated with proton translocation across the membrane, and in this context is a combination predominantly of subunits 2, 4, 5, 14, L, M and N [1]. In many bacterial species these proteins are probable stand-alone transporters not coupled with oxidoreduction [2].
The proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase catalyses the electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone linked with proton translocation across the membrane. It is the largest, most complex and least understood of the respiratory chain enzymes and ...
The proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase catalyses the electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone linked with proton translocation across the membrane. It is the largest, most complex and least understood of the respiratory chain enzymes and is referred to as Complex I. The subunit composition of the enzyme varies between groups of organisms. Complex I originating from mammalian mitochondria contains 45 different proteins, whereas in bacteria, the corresponding complex NDH-1 consists of 14 different polypeptides. Homologues of these 14 proteins are found among subunits of the mitochondrial complex I, and therefore bacterial NDH-1 might be considered a model proton-pumping NADH dehydrogenase with a minimal set of subunits. Escherichia coli NDH-1 readily disintegrates into 3 sub-complexes: a water-soluble NADH dehydrogenase fragment (NuoE, -F, and -G),the connecting fragment (NuoB, -C, -D, and -I), and the membrane fragment (NuoA, -H, -J, -K, -L, -M, -N). In cyanobacteria and their descendants, the chloroplasts of green plants, the subunit composition of NDH-1 remains obscure. The genes for eleven subunits NdhA-NdhK, homologous to the NuoA-NuoD and NuoH-NuoN of the E. coli complex, have been found in the genome of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 which has a family of 6 ndhD genes and a family of 3 ndhF genes. Two reported multisubunit complexes, NDH-1L and NDH-1M, represent distinct NDH-1 complexes in the thylakoid membrane of Synechocystis 6803 -cyanobacterium. NDH-1L was shown to be essential for photoheterotrophic cell growth, whereas expression of NDH-1M was a prerequisite for CO2 uptake and played an important role in growth of cells at low CO2. Here we report the subunit composition of these two complexes. Fifteen proteins were discovered in NDH-1L including NdhL, a new component of the membrane fragment, and Ssl1690 (designated as NdhO), a novel peripheral subunit [1]. The cyanobacterial NDH-1 complex contains additional subunits, NdhM and NdhN, compared with the minimal set of the bacterial enzyme and these seem to be specific for thylakoid-located NDH-1 of photosynthetic organisms [2]. The three subunits of NDH-1, NdhM, NdhN and NdhO are essential for effecting cyclic electron flow around photosystem I, by supplying extra-ATP for photosynthesis in both plastids and cyanobacteria [3, 4].