New Insights Regarding Hemin Inhibition of the Purified Rat Brain 2-Oxoglutarate Carrier and Relationships with Mitochondrial Dysfunction

J Clin Med. 2022 Dec 19;11(24):7519. doi: 10.3390/jcm11247519.

Abstract

A kinetic analysis of the transport assays on the purified rat brain 2-oxoglutarate/malate carrier (OGC) was performed starting from our recent results reporting about a competitive inhibitory behavior of hemin, a physiological porphyrin derivative, on the OGC reconstituted in an active form into proteoliposomes. The newly provided transport data and the elaboration of the kinetic equations show evidence that hemin exerts a mechanism of partially competitive inhibition, coupled with the formation of a ternary complex hemin-carrier substrate, when hemin targets the OGC from the matrix face. A possible interpretation of the provided kinetic analysis, which is supported by computational studies, could indicate the existence of a binding region responsible for the inhibition of the OGC and supposedly involved in the regulation of OGC activity. The proposed regulatory binding site is located on OGC mitochondrial matrix loops, where hemin could establish specific interactions with residues involved in the substrate recognition and/or conformational changes responsible for the translocation of mitochondrial carrier substrates. The regulatory binding site would be placed about 6 Å below the substrate binding site of the OGC, facing the mitochondrial matrix, and would allow the simultaneous binding of hemin and 2-oxoglutarate or malate to different regions of the carrier. Overall, the presented experimental and computational analyses help to shed light on the possible existence of the hemin-carrier substrate ternary complex, confirming the ability of the OGC to bind porphyrin derivatives, and in particular hemin, with possible consequences for the mitochondrial redox state mediated by the malate/aspartate shuttle led by the mitochondrial carriers OGC and AGC.

Keywords: 2-oxoglutarate carrier; induced-fit molecular docking; kinetic study; mitochondrial carrier regulatory motif; mitochondrial dysfunction; porphyrin derivatives.

Grants and funding

The research activities were funded by the University of Bari with the projects “ProgettoCompetitivo 2018”, “FFABR 2017–2018”, and “Fondi Ateneo ex-60% 2016”, and MIUR with the project “Health, Diet and wealth”: identification of a set of biomarkers of the apoptosis for an innovative industrial Ph.D. course—PON RI 2014–2020, CUP H92H18000160006. The authors would like to express their thanks for the IT resources made available by ReCaS (https://www.recas-bari.it/index.php/en/; accessed on 2 December 2022), a project funded by the MIUR (Italian Ministry for Education, University and Re-search) in the “PON Ricerca e Competitivita 2007–2013-Azione I-Interventi di rafforzamento strutturale” PONa3_00052, Avviso 254/Ric, University of Bari. The authors (C.L.P. and V.T.) would like to thank the Italian Association for Mitochondrial Research (www.mitoairm.it; accessed on 2 December 2022) for providing part of the fellowship of V.T.