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1.
The ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans exhibits a thermodynamically stable ubisemiquinone radical detectable by EPR spectroscopy. The radical is centered at g = 2.004, is sensitive to antimycin, and has a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +42 mV. These properties are very similar to those of the stable ubisemiquinone (Qi) previously characterized in the cytochrome bc1 complexes of mitochondria. The micro-environment of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex changes in parallel with the redox state of the ubiquinone pool. This change is manifested as shifts in the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal from 1.80, 1.89, and 2.02 to 1.76, 1.90, and 2.03, respectively, as ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol. The spectral shift is accompanied by a broadening of the signal and follows a two electron reduction curve, with a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +30 mV. A hydroxy analogue of ubiquinone, UHDBT, which inhibits respiration in the cytochrome bc1 complex, shifts the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal to 1.78, 1.89, and 2.03, respectively, and raises the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur cluster at pH 7.5 from +265 to +320 mV. These changes in the micro-environment of the Paracoccus Rieske iron-sulfur cluster are like those elicited in mitochondria. These results indicate that the cytochrome bc1 complex of P. denitrificans has a binding site for ubisemiquinone and that this site confers properties on the bound ubisemiquinone similar to those in mitochondria. In addition, the line shape of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster changes in response to the oxidation-reduction status of ubiquinone, and the midpoint of the iron-sulfur cluster increases in the presence of a hydroxyquinone analogue of ubiquinone. The latter results are also similar to those observed in the mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex. However, unlike the mitochondrial complexes, which contain eight to 11 polypeptides and are thought to contain distinct quinone binding proteins, the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex contains only three polypeptide subunits, cytochromes b, c1, and iron-sulfur protein. The ubisemiquinone binding site and the site at which ubiquinone and/or ubiquinol bind to affect the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in Paracoccus thus exist in the absence of any distinct quinone binding proteins and must be composed of domains contributed by the cytochromes and/or iron-sulfur protein.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the interaction between monomers of the dimeric yeast cytochrome bc(1) complex by analyzing the pre-steady and steady state activities of the isolated enzyme in the presence of antimycin under conditions that allow the first turnover of ubiquinol oxidation to be observable in cytochrome c(1) reduction. At pH 8.8, where the redox potential of the iron-sulfur protein is approximately 200 mV and in a bc(1) complex with a mutated iron-sulfur protein of equally low redox potential, the amount of cytochrome c(1) reduced by several equivalents of decyl-ubiquinol in the presence of antimycin corresponded to only half of that present in the bc(1) complex. Similar experiments in the presence of several equivalents of cytochrome c also showed only half of the bc(1) complex participating in quinol oxidation. The extent of cytochrome b reduced corresponded to two b(H) hemes undergoing reduction through one center P per dimer, indicating electron transfer between the two cytochrome b subunits. Antimycin stimulated the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity of the bc(1) complex at low inhibitor/enzyme ratios. This stimulation could only be fitted to a model in which half of the bc(1) dimer is inactive when both center N sites are free, becoming active upon binding of one center N inhibitor molecule per dimer, and there is electron transfer between the cytochrome b subunits of the dimer. These results are consistent with an alternating half-of-the-sites mechanism of ubiquinol oxidation in the bc(1) complex dimer.  相似文献   

3.
A refinement of the protonmotive Q cycle mechanism is proposed in which oxidation of ubiquinol is a concerted reaction and occurs by an alternating, half-of-the-sites mechanism. A concerted mechanism of ubiquinol oxidation is inferred from the finding that there is reciprocal control between the high potential and low potential redox components involved in ubiquinol oxidation. The potential of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein controls the rate of reduction of the b cytochromes, and the potential of the b cytochromes controls the rate of reduction of the Rieske protein and cytochrome c(1). A concerted mechanism of ubiquinol oxidation reconciles the findings that the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase kinetics of the bc(1) complex include both a pH dependence and a dependence on Rieske iron-sulfur protein midpoint potential.An alternating, half-of-the-sites mechanism for ubiquinol oxidation is inferred from the finding that some inhibitory analogs of ubiquinol that block ubiquinol oxidation by binding to the ubiquinol oxidation site in the bc(1) complex inhibit the yeast enzyme with a stoichiometry of 0.5 per bc(1) complex. One molecule of inhibitor is sufficient to fully inhibit the dimeric enzyme, and the binding is anti-cooperative, in that a second molecule of inhibitor binds with much lower affinity to a dimer in which an inhibitor molecule is already bound. An alternating, half-of-the-sites mechanism implies that, at least under some conditions, only half of the sites in the dimeric enzyme are reactive at any one time. This provides a raison d'être for the dimeric structure of the enzyme, in that bc(1) activity may be regulated and capable of switching between a half-of-the-sites active and a fully active enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the oxidation of the reduced ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase (bc1 complex) isolated from beef heart mitochondria. The oxidation of cytochrome c1 by both potassium ferricyanide and cytochrome c in the ascorbate-reduced bc1 complex is not a first-order process. This is taken as evidence that cytochrome c1 is in rapid equilibrium with the Rieske iron-sulphur center. Among the several inhibitors tested, only 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole and stigmatellin are seen to affect this redox equilibrium between the high-potential centers of the beef heart bc1 complex. The oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c in both the succinate-reduced and the fully reduced bc1 complex is blocked by all the inhibitors tested. This inhibition occurs simultaneously with an acceleration in the oxidation of cytochrome c1, even after extraction of the endogenous ubiquinone which is present in the bc1 preparation. Almost complete extraction of ubiquinone from the bc1 complex has no effect upon the rapid phase of cytochrome b oxidation, nor does it alter the inhibition of cytochrome b oxidation by the various inhibitors. The oxidation of cytochrome b by exogenous ubiquinones is stimulated by myxothiazol and partially inhibited by antimycin. However, the addition of both these inhibitors together completely blocks the oxidation of cytochrome b by quinones. In contrast, the simultaneous addition of antimycin and myxothiazol has no such synergistic effect upon the oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c. Our data show that intramolecular electron transfer from cytochrome(s) b to the Rieske iron-sulphur center can take place in the bc1 complex without involvement of endogenous ubiquinone-10. This electron pathway is sensitive to all the inhibitors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
(1) The role of the ubiquinone pool in the reactions of the cyclic electron-transfer chain has been investigated by observing the effects of reduction of the ubiquinone pool on the kinetics and extent of the cytochrome and electrochromic carotenoid absorbance changes following flash illumination. (2) In the presence of antimycin, flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b-561 is dependent on a coupled oxidation of ubiquinol. The ubiquinol oxidase site of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c(2) oxidoreductase catalyses a concerted reaction in which one electron is transferred to a high-potential chain containing cytochromes c(1) and c(2), the Rieske-type iron-sulfur center, and the reaction center primary donor, and a second electron is transferred to a low-potential chain containing cytochromes b-566 and b-561. (3) The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 in the presence of antimycin has been shown to reflect the rate of turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. This diagnostic feature has been used to measure the dependence of the kinetics of the site on the ubiquinol concentration. Over a limited range of concentration (0-3 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561), the kinetics showed a second-order process, first order with respect to ubiquinol from the pool. At higher ubiquinol concentrations, other processes became rate determining, so that above approx. 25 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561, no further increase in rate was seen. (4) The kinetics and extents of cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash in the presence of antimycin, and of the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c(1) and c(2), and the slow phase of the carotenoid change, have been measured as a function of redox potential over a wide range. The initial rate for all these processes increased on reduction of the suspension over the range between 180 and 100 mV (pH 7). The increase in rate occurred as the concentration of ubiquinol in the pool increased on reduction, and could be accounted for in terms of the increased rate of ubiquinol oxidation. It is not necessary to postulate the presence of a tightly bound quinone at this site with altered redox properties, as has been previously assumed. (5) The antimycin-sensitive reactions reflect the turnover of a second catalytic site of the complex, at which cytochrome b-561 is oxidized in an electrogenic reaction. We propose that ubiquinone is reduced at this site with a mechanism similar to that of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. We suggest that antimycin binds at this site, and displaces the quinone species so that all reactions at the site are inhibited. (6) In coupled chromatophores, the turnover of the ubiquinone reductase site can be measured by the antimycin-sensitive slow phase of the electrochromic carotenoid change. At redox potentials higher than 180 mV, where the pool is completely oxidized, the maximal extent of the slow phase is half that at 140 mV, where the pool contains approx. 1 mol ubiquinone/mol cytochrome b-561 before the flash. At both potentials, cytochrome b-561 became completely reduced following one flash in the presence of antimycin. The results are interpreted as showing that at potentials higher than 180 mV, ubiquinol stoichiometric with cytochrome b-561 reaches the complex from the reaction center. The increased extent of the carotenoid change, when one extra ubiquinol is available in the pool, is interpreted as showing that the ubiquinol oxidase site turns over twice, and the ubiquinone reductase sites turns over once, for a complete turnover of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c(2) oxidoreductase complex, and the net oxidation of one ubiquinol/complex. (7) The antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c(1) and c(2) is shown to reflect the second turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. (8) We suggest that, in the presence of antimycin, the ubiquinol oxidase site reaches a quasi equilibrium with ubiquinol from the pool and the high- and low-potential chains, and that the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalysed constrains the site to the single turnover under most conditions. (9) The results are discussed in the context of a detailed mechanism. The modified Q-cycle proposed is described by physicochemical parameters which account well for the results reported.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidation factor, a protein required for electron transfer from succinate to cytochrome c in the mitochondrial respiratory chain, has been purified from isolated succinate . cytochrome c reductase complex. Purification of the protein has been followed by a reconstitution assay in which restoration of ubiquinol . cytochrome c reductase activity is proportional to the amount of oxidation factor added back to depleted reductase complex. The purified protein is a homogeneous polypeptide on acrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate and migrates with an apparent Mr = 24,500. Purified oxidation factor restores succinate . cytochrome c reductase and ubiquinol . cytochrome c reductase activities to depleted reductase complex. It is not required for succinate dehydrogenase nor for succinate . ubiquinone reductase activities of the reconstituted reductase complex. Oxidation factor co-electrophoreses with the iron-sulfur protein polypeptide of ubiquinol . cytochrome c reductase complex. The purified protein contains 56 nmol of nonheme iron and 36 nmol of acid-labile sulfide/mg of protein and possesses an EPR spectrum with the characteristic "g = 1.90" signal identical to that of the iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome b . c1 complex. In addition, the optimal conditions for extraction of oxidation factor, including reduction with hydrosulfite and treatment of the b . c1 complex with antimycin, are identical to those which facilitate extraction of the iron-sulfur protein from the b . c1 complex. These results indicate that oxidation factor is a reconstitutively active form of the iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome b . c1 complex first discovered by Rieske and co-workers (Rieske, J.S., Maclennan, D.H., and Coleman, R. (1964) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 15, 338-344) and thus demonstrate that this iron-sulfur protein is required for electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c in the mitochondrial respiratory chain.  相似文献   

7.
Flash-induced redox changes of b-type and c-type cytochromes have been studied in chromatophores from the aerobic photosynthetic bacterium Roseobacter denitrificans under redox-controlled conditions. The flash-oxidized primary donor P+ of the reaction center (RC) is rapidly re-reduced by heme H1 (Em,7 = 290 mV), heme H2 (Em,7 = 240 mV) or low-potential hemes L1/L2 (Em,7 = 90 mV) of the RC-bound tetraheme, depending on their redox state before photoexcitation. By titrating the extent of flash-induced low-potential heme oxidation, a midpoint potential equal to -50 mV has been determined for the primary quinone acceptor QA. Only the photo-oxidized heme H2 is re-reduced in tens of milliseconds, in a reaction sensitive to inhibitors of the bc1 complex, leading to the concomitant oxidation of a cytochrome c spectrally distinct from the RC-bound hemes. This reaction involves cytochrome c551 in a diffusional process. Participation of the bc1 complex in a cyclic electron transfer chain has been demonstrated by detection of flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b561, stimulated by antimycin and inhibited by myxothiazol. Cytochrome b561, reduced upon flash excitation, is re-oxidized slowly even in the absence of antimycin. The rate of reduction of cytochrome b561 in the presence of antimycin increases upon lowering the ambient redox potential, most likely reflecting the progressive prereduction of the ubiquinone pool. Chromatophores contain approximately 20 ubiquinone-10 molecules per RC. At the optimal redox poise, approximately 0.3 cytochrome b molecules per RC are reduced following flash excitation. Cytochrome b reduction titrates out at Eh < 100 mV, when low-potential heme(s) rapidly re-reduce P+ preventing cyclic electron transfer. Results can be rationalized in the framework of a Q-cycle-type model.  相似文献   

8.
A ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex has been purified from the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans by extraction with dodecyl maltoside and ion exchange chromatography of the extract. The purified complex contains two spectrally and thermodynamically distinct b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, and a Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein. Optical spectra indicate absorption peaks at 553 nm for cytochrome c1 and at 560 and 566 nm for the high and low potential hemes of cytochrome b. The spectrum of cytochrome b560 is shifted to longer wavelength by antimycin. The Paracoccus bc1 complex consists of only three polypeptide subunits. On the basis of their relative electrophoretic mobilities, these have apparent molecular masses of 62, 39, and 20 kDa. The 62- and 39-kDa subunits have been identified as cytochromes c1 and b, respectively. The 20-kDa subunit is assumed to be the Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein on the basis of its molecular weight and the presence of an EPR-detectable signal typical of this iron-sulfur protein in the three-subunit complex. The Paracoccus bc1 complex catalyzes reduction of cytochrome c by ubiquinol with a turnover of 470 s-1. This activity is inhibited by antimycin, myxothiazol, stigmatellin, and hydroxyquinone analogues of ubiquinone, all of which inhibit electron transfer in the cytochrome bc1 complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The electron transfer functions of the Paracoccus complex thus appear to be similar, and possibly identical, to those of the bc1 complex of eukaryotic mitochondria. The Paracoccus bc1 complex has the simplest subunit composition and one of the highest turnover numbers of any bc1 complex isolated from any species to date. These properties suggest that the structural requirements for electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c are met by a small number of peptides and that the "extra" peptides occurring in the mitochondrial bc1 complexes serve some other function(s), possibly in biogenesis or insertion of the complex into that organelle.  相似文献   

9.
Resolution and reconstitution has been used to examine the involvement of the iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome b-c1 segment in electron transfer reactions in this region of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The iron-sulfur protein is required for electron transfer from succinate and from ubiquinol to cytochrome c1. It is not required for reduction of cytochrome b under these conditions, but it is required for oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c plus cytochrome c oxidase. Removal of the iron-sulfur protein from the b-c1 complex prevents reduction of both cytochromes b and c1 by succinate or ubiquinol if antimycin is added to the depleted complex. As increasing amounts of iron-sulfur protein are reconstituted to the depleted complex, the amounts of cytochromes b and c1 reduced by succinate in the presence of antimycin increase and closely parallel the amounts of ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity restored to the reconstituted complex, measured before addition of antimycin. The function of the iron-sulfur protein in these oxidation-reduction reactions is consistent with a cyclic pathway of electron transfer through the cytochrome b-c1 complex, in which the iron-sulfur protein functions as a ubiquinol-cytochrome c1/ubisemiquinone-cytochrome b oxidoreductase.  相似文献   

10.
Reduction of cytochrome b in isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase is a triphasic reaction. Initially, there is a relatively rapid, partial reduction of the cytochrome b, the rate of which matches the rate of reduction of cytochrome c1. This is followed by partial or complete reoxidation of the b, which is then followed by slow rereduction. At very low concentrations of succinate, the initial partial reduction of b is followed by reoxidation, but the third (rereduction) phase is absent, owing to insufficient substrate to rereduce the cytochromes. If antimycin is added at various times during the triphasic reaction, it inhibits the reoxidation and also inhibits the rereduction phase. Antimycin does not inhibit the initial phase of b reduction and, if added before or during this phase, it causes reduction of b to proceed to completion as a monophasic reaction. Myxothiazol inhibits the first phase of b reduction and the subsequent reoxidation, but does not inhibit the third, slow phase of b reduction. The resulting monophasic reduction of b which is observed in the presence of myxothiazol is slower than that in the presence of antimycin. The combination of both inhibitors, whether added together or successively during the triphasic reaction, completely inhibits b reduction. The triphasic reduction of cytochrome b is consistent with electron transfer by a protonmotive Q cycle in which there are two pathways for cytochrome b reduction. One pathway allows the initial phase of cytochrome b reduction by a myxothiazol-sensitive reaction in which reduction of b by ubisemiquinone is linked to reduction of iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1 by ubiquinol. In the second phase of the triphasic reaction, the b cytochromes are reoxidized by ubiquinone or ubisemiquinone through an antimycin-sensitive reaction. If oxidation of ubiquinol by iron-sulfur protein is blocked, either by myxothiazol or by reduction of iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1, the b cytochromes can be reduced by reversal of the antimycin-sensitive pathway, thus accounting for the third phase of b reduction.  相似文献   

11.
M  rten K. F. Wikstr  m  Jan A. Berden 《BBA》1972,283(3):403-420
1. The effect of oxidizing equivalents on the redox state of cytochrome b in the presence of antimycin has been studied in the presence and absence of various redox mediators.

2. The antimycin-induced extra reduction of cytochrome b is always dependent on the initial presence of an oxidant such as oxygen. After removal of the oxidant this effect remains or is partially (under some conditions even completely) abolished depending on the redox potential of the substrate used and the leak through the antimycin-inhibited site.

3. The increased reduction of cytochrome b induced by oxidant in the presence of antimycin involves all three spectroscopically resolvable b components (b-562, b-566 and b-558.

4. Redox mediators with an actual redox potential of less than 100–170 mV cause the oxidation of cytochrome b reduced under the influence of antimycin and oxidant.

5. Redox titrations of cytochrome b with the succinate/fumarate couple were performed aerobically in the presence of cyanide. In the presence of antimycin two b components are separated potentiometrically, one with an apparent midpoint potential above 80 mV (at pH 7.0), outside the range of the succinate/fumurate couple, and one with an apparent midpoint potential of 40 mV and an n value of 2. In the absence of antimycin cytochrome b titrates essentially as one species with a midpoint potential of 39 mV (at pH 7.0) and n = 1.14.

6. The increased reducibility of cytochrome b induced by antimycin plus oxidant is considered to be the result of two effects: inhibition of oxidation of ferrocytochrome b by ferricytochrome c1 (the effect of antimycin), and oxidation of the semiquinone form of a two-equivalent redox couple such as ubiquinone/ubiquinol by the added oxidant, leading to a decreased redox potential of the QH2/QH couple and reduction of cytochrome b.  相似文献   


12.
This review is focused on the mechanism of ubiquinol oxidation by the cytochrome bc1 complex (bc1). This integral membrane complex serves as a "hub" in the vast majority of electron transfer chains. The bc1 oxidizes a ubiquinol molecule to ubiquinone by a unique "bifurcated" reaction where the two released electrons go to different acceptors: one is accepted by the mobile redox active domain of the [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur Rieske protein (FeS protein) and the other goes to cytochrome b. The nature of intermediates in this reaction remains unclear. It is also debatable how the enzyme prevents short-circuiting that could happen if both electrons escape to the FeS protein. Here, I consider a reaction mechanism that (i) agrees with the available experimental data, (ii) entails three traits preventing the short-circuiting in bc1, and (iii) exploits the evident structural similarity of the ubiquinone binding sites in the bc1 and the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC). Based on the latter congruence, it is suggested that the reaction route of ubiquinol oxidation by bc1 is a reversal of that leading to the ubiquinol formation in the RC. The rate-limiting step of ubiquinol oxidation is then the re-location of a ubiquinol molecule from its stand-by site within cytochrome b into a catalytic site, which is formed only transiently, after docking of the mobile redox domain of the FeS protein to cytochrome b. In the catalytic site, the quinone ring is stabilized by Glu-272 of cytochrome b and His-161 of the FeS protein. The short circuiting is prevented as long as: (i) the formed semiquinone anion remains bound to the reduced FeS domain and impedes its undocking, so that the second electron is forced to go to cytochrome b; (ii) even after ubiquinol is fully oxidized, the reduced FeS domain remains docked to cytochrome b until electron(s) pass through cytochrome b; (iii) if cytochrome b becomes (over)reduced, the binding and oxidation of further ubiquinol molecules is hampered; the reason is that the Glu-272 residue is turned towards the reduced hemes of cytochrome b and is protonated to stabilize the surplus negative charge; in this state, this residue cannot participate in the binding/stabilization of a ubiquinol molecule.  相似文献   

13.
In this minireview an overview is presented of the kinetics of electron transfer within the cytochrome bc (1) complex, as well as from cytochrome bc (1) to cytochrome c. The cytochrome bc (1) complex (ubiquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) is an integral membrane protein found in the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as the electron transfer chains of many respiratory and photosynthetic bacteria. Experiments on both mitochondrial and bacterial cyatochrome bc (1) have provided detailed kinetic information supporting a Q-cycle mechanism for electron transfer within the complex. On the basis of X-ray crystallographic studies of cytochrome bc (1), it has been proposed that the Rieske iron-sulfur protein undergoes large conformational changes as it transports electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (1). A new method was developed to study electron transfer within cytochrome bc (1) using a binuclear ruthenium complex to rapidly photooxidize cytochrome c (1). The rate constant for electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center to cytochrome c (1) was found to be 80,000 s(-1), and is controlled by the dynamics of conformational changes in the iron-sulfur protein. Moreover, a linkage between the conformation of the ubiquinol binding site and the conformational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein has been discovered which could play a role in the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. A ruthenium photoexcitation method has also been developed to measure electron transfer from cytochrome c (1) to cytochrome c. The kinetics of electron transfer are interpreted in light of a new X-ray crystal structure for the complex between cytochrome bc (1) and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

14.
Two sets of studies have been reported on the electron transfer pathway of complex III in bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP). 1) In the presence of myxothiazol, MOA-stilbene, stigmatellin, or of antimycin added to SMP pretreated with ascorbate and KCN to reduce the high potential components (iron-sulfur protein (ISP) and cytochrome c(1)) of complex III, addition of succinate reduced heme b(H) followed by a slow and partial reduction of heme b(L). Similar results were obtained when SMP were treated only with KCN or NaN(3), reagents that inhibit cytochrome oxidase, not complex III. The average initial rate of b(H) reduction under these conditions was about 25-30% of the rate of b reduction by succinate in antimycin-treated SMP, where both b(H) and b(L) were concomitantly reduced. These results have been discussed in relation to the Q-cycle hypothesis and the effect of the redox state of ISP/c(1) on cytochrome b reduction by succinate. 2) Reverse electron transfer from ISP reduced with ascorbate plus phenazine methosulfate to cytochrome b was studied in SMP, ubiquinone (Q)-depleted SMP containing 相似文献   

15.
Bifurcated electron flow to high potential "Rieske" iron-sulfur cluster and low potential heme b(L) is crucial for respiratory energy conservation by the cytochrome bc(1) complex. The chemistry of ubiquinol oxidation has to ensure the thermodynamically unfavorable electron transfer to heme b(L). To resolve a central controversy about the number of ubiquinol molecules involved in this reaction, we used high resolution magic-angle-spinning nuclear magnetic resonance experiments to show that two out of three n-decyl-ubiquinones bind at the ubiquinol oxidation center of the complex. This substantiates a proposed mechanism in which a charge transfer between a ubiquinol/ubiquinone pair explains the bifurcation of electron flow.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of inhibitors on the reduction of the bis-heme cytochrome b of ubiquinol: cytochrome c oxidoreductase (complex III, bc1 complex) has been studied in bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP) when cytochrome b was reduced by NADH and succinate via the ubiquinone (Q) pool or by ascorbate plus N,N,N', N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine via cytochrome c1 and the iron-sulfur protein of complex III (ISP). The inhibitors used were antimycin (an N-side inhibitor), beta-methoxyacrylate derivatives, stigmatellin (P-side inhibitors), and ethoxyformic anhydride, which modifies essential histidyl residues in ISP. In agreement with our previous findings, the following results were obtained: (i) When ISP/cytochrome c1 were prereduced or SMP were treated with a P-side inhibitor, the high potential heme bH was fully and rapidly reduced by NADH or succinate, whereas the low potential heme bL was only partially reduced. (ii) Reverse electron transfer from ISP/c1 to cytochrome b was inhibited more by antimycin than by the P-side inhibitors. This reverse electron transfer was unaffected when, instead of normal SMP, Q-extracted SMP containing 200-fold less Q (0. 06 mol Q/mol cytochrome b or c1) were used. (iii) The cytochrome b reduced by reverse electron transfer through the leak of a P-side inhibitor was rapidly oxidized upon subsequent addition of antimycin. This antimycin-induced reoxidation did not happen when Q-extracted SMP were used. The implications of these results on the path of electrons in complex III, on oxidant-induced extra cytochrome b reduction, and on the inhibition of forward electron transfer to cytochrome b by a P-side plus an N-side inhibitor have been discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Redox transitions in a film of detergent-purified bovine cytochrome bc(1) complex were investigated by perfusion-induced attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. The technique provides a flexible method for generating redox-induced IR changes of components of bovine cytochrome bc(1) complex at a high signal:noise ratio. These IR redox difference spectra arise from perturbations of prosthetic groups and surrounding protein. Visible difference spectra were recorded synchronously using a light beam reflected from the exposed prism surface and provided a quantitative means of determining the redox transitions that were occurring. IR and visible redox difference spectra of iron-sulfur protein/cytochrome c(1), heme b(H), and heme b(L) were separated by selective reduction and/or oxidation that extends published data on the homologous bacterial enzyme. Several bands could be tentatively assigned to redox-sensitive modes of hemes and ubiquinone and changes in the surrounding protein by comparison with available data for bacterial bc(1) complex, other related heme proteins, and model compounds. Some tentative assignments of further signals to specific amino acids are made on the basis of known crystal structures.  相似文献   

18.
(1) The role of the ubiquinone pool in the reactions of the cyclic electron-transfer chain has been investigated by observing the effects of reduction of the ubiquinone pool on the kinetics and extent of the cytochrome and electrochromic carotenoid absorbance changes following flash illumination. (2) In the presence of antimycin, flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b-561 is dependent on a coupled oxidation of ubiquinol. The ubiquinol oxidase site of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase catalyses a concerted reaction in which one electron is transferred to a high-potential chain containing cytochromes c1 and c2, the Rieske-type iron-sulfur center, and the reaction center primary donor, and a second electron is transferred to a low-potential chain containing cytochromes b-566 and b-561. (3) The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 in the presence of antimycin has been shown to reflect the rate of turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. This diagnostic feature has been used to measure the dependence of the kinetics of the site on the ubiquinol concentration. Over a limited range of concentration (0–3 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561), the kinetics showed a second-order process, first order with respect to ubiquinol from the pool. At higher ubiquinol concentrations, other processes became rate determining, so that above approx. 25 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561, no further increase in rate was seen. (4) The kinetics and extents of cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash in the presence of antimycin, and of the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2, and the slow phase of the carotenoid change, have been measured as a function of redox potential over a wide range. The initial rate for all these processes increased on reduction of the suspension over the range between 180 and 100 mV (pH 7). The increase in rate occurred as the concentration of ubiquinol in the pool increased on reduction, and could be accounted for in terms of the increased rate of ubiquinol oxidation. It is not necessary to postulate the presence of a tightly bound quinone at this site with altered redox properties, as has been previously assumed. (5) The antimycin-sensitive reactions reflect the turnover of a second catalytic site of the complex, at which cytochrome b-561 ix oxidized in an electrogenic reaction. We propose that ubiquinone is reduced at this site with a mechanism similar to that of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. We suggest that antimycin binds at this site, and displaces the quinone species so that all reactions at the site are inhibited. (6) In coupled chromatophores, the turnover of the ubiquinone reductase site can be measured by the antimycin-sensitive slow phase of the electrochromic carotenoid change. At redox potentials higher than 180 mV, where the pool is completely oxidized, the maximal extent of the slow phase is half that at 140 mV, where the pool contains approx. 1 mol ubiquinone/mol cytochrome b-561 before the flash. At both potentials, cytochrome b-561 became completely reduced following one flash in the presence of antimycin. The results are interpreted as showing that at potentials higher than 180 mV, ubiquinol stoichiometric with cytochrome b-561 reaches the complex from the reaction center. The increased extent of the carotenoid change, when one extra ubiquinol is available in the pool, is interpreted as showing that the ubiquinol oxidase site turns over twice, and the ubiquinone reductase sites turns over once, for a complete turnover of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase complex, and the net oxidation of one ubiquinol/complex. (7) The antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2 is shown to reflect the second turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. (8) We suggest that, in the presence of antimycin, the ubiquinol oxidase site reaches a quasi equilibrium with ubiquinol from the pool and the high- and low-potential chains, and that the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalysed constrains the site to the single turnover under most conditions. (9) The results are discussed in the context of a detailed mechanism. The modified Q-cycle proposed is described by physicochemical parameters which account well for the results reported.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of the exogenous quinones, duroquinone (DQ) and the decyl analogue of ubiquinone (DB) with the mitochondrial respiratory chain was studied in both wild-type and a ubiquinone-deficient mutant of yeast. DQ can be reduced directly by NADH dehydrogenase, but cannot be reduced by succinate dehydrogenase in the absence of endogenous ubiquinone. The succinate-driven reduction of DQ can be stimulated by DB in a reaction inhibited 50% by antimycin and 70-80% by the combined use of antimycin and myxothiazol, suggesting that electron transfer occurs via the cytochrome b-c1 complex. Both DQ and DB can effectively mediate the reduction of cytochrome b by the primary dehydrogenases through center o, but their ability to mediate the reduction of cytochrome b through center i is negligible. Two reaction sites for ubiquinol seem to be present at center o: one is independent of endogenous Q6 with a high reaction rate and a high Km; the other is affected by endogenous Q6 and has a low reaction rate and a low Km. By contrast, only one ubiquinol reaction site was observed at center i, where DB appears to compete with endogenous Q6. DB can oxidize most of the pre-reduced cytochrome b, while DQ can oxidize only 50%. On the basis of these data, the possible binding patterns of DB on different Q-reaction sites and the requirement for ubiquinone in the continuous oxidation of DQH are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated in detail the effects of dibromothymoquinone (2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, DBMIB) on the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 complex) from bovine heart mitochondria. The inhibitory action of DBMIB on the steady-state activity of the bc1 complex is related to the specific binding of the quinone to the purified enzymatic complex. At concentrations higher than 10 mol per mol of the enzyme, DBMIB is able to stimulate an antimycin-insensitive reduction of cytochrome c catalyzed by the bc1 complex. In accordance with kinetic data showing a competition by endogenous ubiquinone in the inhibitory action, DBMIB can be considered as a product-like inhibitor of the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity. The site of specific binding of dibromothymoquinone in the bc1 complex enables it to interact with the iron-sulphur center of the enzyme, as indicated by changes induced in the EPR spectrum of the center. However, the inhibitor also directly interacts with cytochrome b, promoting a fast chemical oxidation of the reduced heme center. In spite of these effects, DBMIB has been found not to exert significant effects on the first turnover of the fully oxidized bc1 complex, as monitored by the rapid reduction of both cytochromes b and c1 by ubiquinol-1. In the presence of antimycin, only a stimulation of cytochrome c1 reduction, in parallel to an enhanced cytochrome b reoxidation, is observed. Moreover, DBMIB does not affect the oxidant-induced extra cytochrome b reduction in the presence of antimycin. On the basis of the evidences suggesting a competition with the endogenous ubiquinone in the redox cycle of the bc1 complex, a model is proposed for the mechanism of DBMIB inhibition. Such model can also explain at the molecular level the redox bypass induced by dibromothymoquinone in the whole respiratory chain (Degli Esposti, M., Rugolo, M. and Lenaz, G. (1983) FEBS Lett. 156, 15-19).  相似文献   

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