Ville Kaila Professor i Biokemi

Kontakt

Namn och titel: Ville KailaProfessor i Biokemi

Telefon: +468164240

Arbetsplats: Institutionen för biokemi och biofysik Länk till annan webbplats.

Besöksadress Svante Arrhenius väg 16

Postadress Institutionen för biokemi och biofysik106 91 Stockholm





  • A leigh syndrome mutation perturbs long-range energy coupling in respiratory complex I

    Artikel
    2025. Franziska Hoeser, Patricia Saura, Caroline Harter, Ville R. I. Kaila, Thorsten Friedrich.

    Respiratory complex I is a central enzyme of cellular energy metabolism that couples electron transfer with proton translocation across a biological membrane. In doing so, it powers oxidative phosphorylation that drives energy consuming processes. Mutations in complex I lead to severe neurodegenerative diseases in humans. However, the biochemical consequences of these mutations remain largely unknown. Here, we use the Escherichia coli complex I as a model to biochemically characterize the F124LMT-ND5 mutation found in patients suffering from Leigh syndrome. We show that the mutation drastically perturbs proton translocation and electron transfer activities to the same extent, despite the remarkable 140 Å distance between the mutated position and the electron transfer domain. Our molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the disease-causing mutation induces conformational changes that hamper the propagation of an electric wave through an ion-paired network essential for proton translocation. Our findings imply that malfunction of the proton translocation domain is entirely transmitted to the electron transfer domain underlining the action-at-a-distance coupling in the proton-coupled electron transfer of respiratory complex I.

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  • Modified chlorophyll pigment at ChlD1 tunes photosystem II beyond the red-light limit

    Artikel
    2025. Friederike Allgöwer, Abhishek Sirohiwal, Ana P. Gamiz-Hernandez, Maximilian C. Pöverlein, Andrea Fantuzzi, A. William Rutherford, Ville R. I. Kaila.

    Photosystem II (PSII) is powered by the light-capturing properties of chlorophyll a pigments that define the spectral range of oxygenic photosynthesis. Some photosynthetic cyanobacteria can acclimate to growth in longer wavelength light by replacing five chlorophylls with long wavelength pigments in specific locations, including one in the reaction center (RC) (Science, 2018, 360, 1210-1213). However, the exact location and the nature of these long wavelength pigments still remain uncertain. Here we have addressed the color-tuning mechanism of the far-red light PSII (FRL-PSII) by excited state calculations at both the ab initio correlated (ADC2) and linear-response time-dependent density functional theory (LR-TDDFT) levels in combination with large-scale hybrid quantum/classical (QM/MM) simulations and atomistic molecular dynamics. We show that substitution of a single chlorophyll pigment (ChlD1) at the RC by chlorophyll d leads to a spectral shift beyond the far-red light limit, as a result of the protein electrostatic, polarization and electronic coupling effects that reproduce key structural and spectroscopic observations. Pigment substitution at the ChlD1 site further results in a low site energy within the RC that could function as a sink for the excitation energy and initiate the primary charge separation reaction, driving the water oxidation. Our findings provide a basis for understanding color-tuning mechanisms and bioenergetic principles of oxygenic photosynthesis at the far-red light limit.

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  • Molecular basis for azetidine-2-carboxylic acid biosynthesis

    Artikel
    2025. Tim J. Klaubert, Jonas Gellner, Charles Bernard, Juliana Effert, Carine Lombard, Ville R. I. Kaila, Helge B. Bode, Yanyan Li, Michael Groll.

    Azetidine-2-carboxylic acid (AZE) is a long-known plant metabolite. Recently, AZE synthases have been identified in bacterial natural product pathways involving non-ribosomal peptide synthetases. AZE synthases catalyse the intramolecular 4-exo-tet cyclisation of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), yielding a highly strained heterocycle. Here, we combine structural and biochemical analyses with quantum mechanical calculations and mutagenesis studies to reveal catalytic insights into AZE synthases. The cyclisation of SAM is facilitated by an exceptional substrate conformation and supported by desolvation effects as well as cation-π interactions. In addition, we uncover related SAM lyases in diverse bacterial phyla, suggesting a wider prevalence of AZE-containing metabolites than previously expected. To explore the potential of AZE as a proline mimic in combinatorial biosynthesis, we introduce an AZE synthase into the pyrrolizixenamide pathway and thereby engineer analogues of azabicyclenes. Taken together, our findings provide a molecular framework to understand and exploit SAM-dependent cyclisation reactions.

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  • Molecular Principles of Proton-Coupled Quinone Reduction in the Membrane-Bound Superoxide Oxidase

    Artikel
    2025. Daniel Riepl, Abbas Abou-Hamdan, Jonas Gellner, Olivier Biner, Dan Sjöstrand, Martin Högbom, Christoph von Ballmoos, Ville R. I. Kaila.

    Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are physiologically harmful radical species generated as byproducts of aerobic respiration. To detoxify ROS, most cells employ superoxide scavenging enzymes that disproportionate superoxide (O2·–) to oxygen (O2) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). In contrast, the membrane-bound superoxide oxidase (SOO) is a minimal 4-helical bundle protein that catalyzes the direct oxidation of O2·– to O2 and drives quinone reduction by mechanistic principles that remain unknown. Here, we combine multiscale hybrid quantum/classical (QM/MM) free energy calculations and microsecond molecular dynamics simulations with functional assays and site-directed mutagenesis experiments to probe the mechanistic principles underlying the charge transfer reactions of the superoxide-driven quinone reduction. We characterize a cluster of charged residues at the periplasmic side of the membrane that functions as a O2·– collecting antenna, initiating electron transfer via two b hemes to the active site for quinone reduction at the cytoplasmic side. Based on multidimensional QM/MM string simulations, we find that a proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reaction from the active site heme b and nearby histidine residues (H87, H158) results in quinol (QH2) formation, followed by proton uptake from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. The functional relevance of the identified residues is supported by site-directed mutagenesis and activity assays, with mutations leading to inhibition of the O2·–-driven quinone reduction activity. We suggest that the charge transfer reactions could build up a proton motive force that supports the bacterial energy transduction machinery, while the PCET machinery provides unique design principles of a minimal oxidoreductase.

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  • Molecular principles of redox-coupled sodium pumping of the ancient Rnf machinery

    Artikel
    2025. Anuj Kumar, Jennifer Roth, Hyunho Kim, Patricia Saura, Stefan Bohn, Tristan Reif-Trauttmansdorff, Anja Schubert, Ville R. I. Kaila, Jan M. Schuller, Volker Müller.

    The Rnf complex is the primary respiratory enzyme of several anaerobic prokaryotes that transfers electrons from ferredoxin to NAD+ and pumps ions (Na+ or H+) across a membrane, powering ATP synthesis. Rnf is widespread in primordial organisms and the evolutionary predecessor of the Na+-pumping NADH-quinone oxidoreductase (Nqr). By running in reverse, Rnf uses the electrochemical ion gradient to drive ferredoxin reduction with NADH, providing low potential electrons for nitrogenases and CO2 reductases. Yet, the molecular principles that couple the long-range electron transfer to Na+ translocation remain elusive. Here, we resolve key functional states along the electron transfer pathway in the Na+-pumping Rnf complex from Acetobacterium woodii using redox-controlled cryo-electron microscopy that, in combination with biochemical functional assays and atomistic molecular simulations, provide key insight into the redox-driven Na+ pumping mechanism. We show that the reduction of the unique membrane-embedded [2Fe2S] cluster electrostatically attracts Na+, and in turn, triggers an inward/outward transition with alternating membrane access driving the Na+ pump and the reduction of NAD+. Our study unveils an ancient mechanism for redox-driven ion pumping, and provides key understanding of the fundamental principles governing energy conversion in biological systems.

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Kontakt

Namn och titel: Ville KailaProfessor i Biokemi

Telefon: +468164240

Arbetsplats: Institutionen för biokemi och biofysik Länk till annan webbplats.

Besöksadress Svante Arrhenius väg 16

Postadress Institutionen för biokemi och biofysik106 91 Stockholm