Binding of the Respiratory Chain Inhibitor Antimycin to the Mitochondrial bc(1) Complex: A New Crystal Structure Reveals an Altered Intramolecular Hydrogen-bonding Pattern.
Huang, L.S., Cobessi, D., Tung, E.Y., Berry, E.A.(2005) J Mol Biol 351: 573-597
- PubMed: 16024040 
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2005.05.053
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:  
1PP9, 1PPJ, 2A06 - PubMed Abstract: 
Antimycin A (antimycin), one of the first known and most potent inhibitors of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, binds to the quinone reduction site of the cytochrome bc1 complex. Structure-activity relationship studies have shown that the N-formylamino-salicyl-amide group is responsible for most of the binding specificity, and suggested that a low pKa for the phenolic OH group and an intramolecular H-bond between that OH and the carbonyl O of the salicylamide linkage are important. Two previous X-ray structures of antimycin bound to vertebrate bc1 complex gave conflicting results. A new structure reported here of the bovine mitochondrial bc1 complex at 2.28 A resolution with antimycin bound, allows us for the first time to reliably describe the binding of antimycin and shows that the intramolecular hydrogen bond described in solution and in the small-molecule structure is replaced by one involving the NH rather than carbonyl O of the amide linkage, with rotation of the amide group relative to the aromatic ring. The phenolic OH and formylamino N form H-bonds with conserved Asp228 of cytochrome b, and the formylamino O H-bonds via a water molecule to Lys227. A strong density, the right size and shape for a diatomic molecule is found between the other side of the dilactone ring and the alphaA helix.
Organizational Affiliation: 
Physical Biosciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.