Membranes and Bioenergetics
Photoactivated Azido Fatty Acid Irreversibly Inhibits Anion and Proton Transport through the Mitochondrial Uncoupling Protein

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.11.6199Get rights and content
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The protonophoretic function of uncoupling protein (UCP) is activated by fatty acids. According to the “docking site” hypothesis (Jezek, P., and Garlid, K. D., J. Biol. Chem. 265, 19303-19311, 1990), the fatty acid binding site is identical with the anion channel of UCP. Skulachev (Skulachev, V. P. (1991) FEBS Lett. 294, 158-162) extended this hypothesis by suggesting that fatty acid anions are transported by UCP and that H- are delivered by back-diffusion of the protonated fatty acid through the lipid bilayer. In this model, UCP does not transport H- at all but rather enables fatty acids to act as cycling protonophores. New evidence supports this mechanism (Garlid, K. D., Orosz, D. E., Modrianský, M., Vassanelli, S., and Jezek, P. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 2615-2620).

To help elucidate these hypotheses, we synthesized a photoreactive analog of dodecanoic acid, 12-(4-azido-2-nitrophenylamino)dodecanoic acid (AzDA), and studied its effect on transport in mitochondria and proteoliposomes. AzDA behaved in every respect like a typical fatty acid. In micromolar doses, AzDA activated H- translocation and inhibited Cl and hexanesulfonate uniport through UCP. After UV light exposure, however, activation of H- transport was inhibited, whereas inhibition of anion transport was preserved. These effects were irreversible. Photolabeling of mitochondria with [3H]AzDA resulted in a prominent 32 kDa band of UCP, and few other proteins were labeled. The results indicate that AzDA can be ligated to the protein at or near the docking site, causing irreversible inhibition of both H- and anion transport. The finding that fatty acid-induced H- transport disappears along with anion transport supports the fatty acid-protonophore mechanism of H- transport by UCP.

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