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1.
The single free cysteine at residue 95 of bovine adrenodoxin was labeled with the fluorescent reagent N-iodoacetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (1,5-I-AEDANS). The modification had no effect on the interaction with adrenodoxin reductase or cytochrome P-450scc, suggesting that the AEDANS group at Cys-95 was not located at the binding site for these molecules. Addition of adrenodoxin reductase, cytochrome P-450scc, or cytochrome c to AEDANS-adrenodoxin was found to quench the fluorescence of the AEDANS in a manner consistent with the formation of 1:1 binary complexes. F?rster energy transfer calculations indicated that the AEDANS label on adrenodoxin was 42 A from the heme group in cytochrome c, 36 A from the FAD group in adrenodoxin reductase, and 58 A from the heme group in cytochrome P-450scc in the respective binary complexes. These studies suggest that the FAD group in adrenodoxin reductase is located close to the binding domain for adrenodoxin but that the heme group in cytochrome P-450scc is deeply buried at least 26 A from the binding domain for adrenodoxin. Modification of all the lysines on adrenodoxin with maleic anhydride had no effect on the interaction with either adrenodoxin reductase or cytochrome P-450scc, suggesting that the lysines are not located at the binding site for either protein. Modification of all the arginine residues with p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal also had no effect on the interaction with adrenodoxin reductase or cytochrome P-450scc. These studies are consistent with the proposal that the binding sites on adrenodoxin for adrenodoxin reductase and cytochrome P-450scc overlap, and that adrenodoxin functions as a mobile electron carrier.  相似文献   

2.
The zinc ion in bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase can be completely depleted from the enzyme with mercuric chloride without denaturing the protein. The metal atom stoichiometry of 5Cu/4Fe/0Zn/2Mg obtained for the enzyme following HgCl2 treatment indicates that this depletion is highly selective. Zinc depletion exposes one cysteine on subunit VIa and one cysteine on subunit VIb for N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylene-diamine (1,5-I-AEDANS) labelling, suggesting that the zinc plays a structural role in the protein by providing a bridge between these two subunits. Although the treatment of cytochrome c oxidase with mercuric chloride inhibits the steady-state activity of the enzyme, subsequent removal of the Hg2+ bound to cysteine residues by 1,5-I-AEDANS significantly reverses the inhibition. This latter result indicates that the removal of the zinc itself does not alter the steady-state activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome caa3, a cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, is a two-subunit enzyme containing the four canonical metal centers of cytochrome c oxidases (cytochromes a and a3; copper centers CuA and CuB) and an additional cytochrome c. The smaller subunit contains heme C and was termed the C-protein. We have cloned the genes encoding the subunits of the oxidase and determined the nucleotide sequence of the C-protein gene. The gene and deduced primary amino acid sequences establish that both the gene and the protein are fusions with a typical subunit II sequence and a characteristic cytochrome c sequence; we now call this subunit IIc. The protein thus appears to represent a covalent joining of substrate (cytochrome c) to its enzyme (cytochrome c oxidase). In common with other subunits II, subunit IIc contains two hydrophobic segments of amino acids near the amino terminus that probably form transmembrane helices. Variability analysis of the Thermus and other subunit II sequences suggests that the two putative transmembrane helices in subunit II may be located on the surface of the hydrophobic portion of the intact cytochrome oxidase protein complex. Also in common with other subunits II is a relatively hydrophilic intermembrane domain containing a set of conserved amino acids (2 cysteines and 2 histidines) which have previously been proposed by others to serve as ligands to the CuA center. We compared the subunit IIc sequence with that of related proteins. N2O reductase of Pseudomonas stutzeri, a multi-copper protein that appears to contain a CuA site (Scott, R.A., Zumft, W.G., Coyle, C.L., and Dooley, D.M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4082-4086), contains a 59-residue sequence element that is homologous to the "CuA sequence motif" found in cytochrome oxidase subunits II, including all four putative copper ligands. By contrast, subunit II of the Escherichia coli quinol oxidase, cytochrome bo, also contains a region homologous to the CuA motif, but it lacks the proposed metal binding histidine and cysteine residues; this is consistent with the apparent absence of CuA from cytochrome bo.  相似文献   

4.
The arrangement of the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits in the inner membrane of bovine heart mitochondria was investigated. The experiments were carried out in three steps. In the first step, exposed subunits were coupled to the membrane-impermeant reagent p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate. In the second step, the membranes were lysed with cholate anc cytochrome c oxidase was isolated by immunoprecipitation. In the third step, the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits were separated from each other by dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis and scanned for radioactivity. Exposed subunits on the outer side of the mitochondrial inner membrane were identified by labeling intact mitochondria. Exposed subunits on the matrix side of the inner membrane were identified by labeling sonically prepared submitochondrial particles in which the matrix side of the inner membrane is exposed to the suspending medium. Since sonic irradiation leads to a rearrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in a large fraction of the resulting submitochondrial particles, an immunochemical procedure was developed for isolating particles with a low content of displaced cytochrome c oxidase. With mitochondria, subunits II, V, and VI were labeled, whereas in purified submitochondrial particles most of the label was in subunit III. The arrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in the mitochondrial inner membrane is thus transmembraneous and asymmetric; subunits II, V, and VI are situated on the outer side, subunit III is situated on the matrix side, and subunits I and IV are buried in the interior of the membrane. In a study of purified cytochrome c oxidase labeled with p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate, the results were similar to those obtained with the membrane-bound enzyme. Subunits I and IV were inaccessible to the reagent, whereas the other four subunits were accessible. In contrast, all six subunits became labeled if the enzyme was dissociated with dodecyl sulfate before being exposed to the labeling reagent.  相似文献   

5.
L Prochaska  R Bisson  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3174-3179
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been reacted with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate ([35S]DABS), [35S]-N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethylsulfonate ([35S]NAP-taurine), and two different radioactive arylazidophospholipids. The labeling of the seven different subunits of the enzyme with these protein modifying reagents has been examined. DABS, a water-soluble, lipid-insoluble reagent, reacted with subunits II, III, IV, V, and VII but labeled I or VI only poorly. The arylazidophospholipids, probes for the bilayer-intercalated portion of cytochrome c oxidase, labeled I, III, and VII heavily and II and IV lightly but did not react with V or VI. NAP-taurine labeled all of the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase. Evidence is presented that this latter reagent reacts with the enzyme from outside the bilayer, and the pattern of labeling with the different hydrophilic and hydrophobic labeling reagents is used to derive a model for the arrangement of subunits in cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
The arrangement of subunit IV in beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been explored by chemical labeling and protease digestion studies. This subunit has been purified from four samples of cytochrome c oxidase that had been reacted with N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethyl[35S]-sulfonate (NAP-taurine), diazobenzene[35S]sulfonate, 1-myristoyl-2-[12-[(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)amino]lauroyl]-sn-glycero-3- [14C]phosphocholine (I), and 1-palmitoyl-2-(2-azido-4-nitrobenzoyl)-sn-glycero-3-[3H]phosphocholine (II), respectively. The labeled polypeptide was then fragmented by cyanogen bromide, at arginyl side chains with trypsin (after maleylation), and the distribution of the labeling within the sequence was analyzed. The N-terminal part of subunit IV (residues 1-71) was shown to be heavily labeled by water-soluble, lipid-insoluble reagents but not by the phospholipid derivatives. These latter reagents labeled only in the region of residues 62-122, containing the long hydrophobic and putative membrane-spanning stretch. Trypsin cleavage of native cytochrome c oxidase complex at pH 8.2 was shown to clip the first seven amino acids from subunit IV. This cleavage was found to occur in submitochondrial particles but not in mitochondria or mitoplasts. These results are interpreted to show that subunit IV is oriented with its N terminus on the matrix side of the mitochondrial inner membrane and spans the membrane with the extended sequence of hydrophobic lipid residues 79-98 buried in the bilayer.  相似文献   

7.
A systemic study has been made of copper and heme a binding to subunits of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase. Copper and heme a were readily mobilized by ionic detergents, high ionic strengths, temperatures above 0 degrees C, thiol compounds, and gel-bound peroxides and free radicals when the subunits of the oxidase were dissociated from one another during polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Most subunits showed some affinity for heme a and copper under these conditions. However, in the presence of specific mixtures of ionic and nonionic detergents (e.g. 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.025% Triton X-100) at temperatures below 0 degrees C and in buffers of low ionic strength using 10 to 12% polyacrylamide gels preelectrophoresed for 3 days with thioglycolate, about 90% of the Cu was found on subunit II (Mr = 24,100), and heme a was found in equal amounts of subunits I (Mr = 35,800) and II. The oxidized-reduced and reduced-CO absorption spectra of these subunits resembled those of cytochrome c oxidase. It appears probable that in the native enzyme, subunit I contains heme a and subunit II contains copper and heme a. A relationship of mammalian cytochrome c oxidase to the two-subunit microbial cytochrome oxidase systems appears to exist.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of cytochrome c oxidase subunits I-III was studied in vitro in isolated rat liver mitochondria pre-labeled with [35S]methionine. Individual subunits were immunoabsorbed with monospecific antibodies. Isolated heme a from rat liver mitochondria, when added to radiolabeled mitochondria, induced assembly of subunit I with subunits II and III. Assembly of these subunits was not observed in mitochondria incubated in the presence of heme b(hemin) or in the absence of heme. Quantitative analysis of immunoabsorbed, radiolabeled subunits suggests that the predominant effect of heme a is on the assembly of subunit I with subunit III.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism of an increase in cytochrome c oxidase [EC 1.9.3.1] activity during aging of sliced sweet potato root tissue was investigated with antibiotics and antibody to the purified enzyme. 1. The increase in cytochrome c oxidase activity was inhibited by chloramphenicol but not by cycloheximide. 2. Cytochrome c oxidase purified from wounded tissue was identical with that from intact tissue as judged by the subunit composition, sedimentation velocity, absorption spectrum, antigenicity, and activity per heme a. 3. An increase in the amount of cytochrome c oxidase protein took place during aging of slices. 4. Sweet potato cytochrome c oxidase consists of five subunits. When slices were aged in the presence of [3H]leucine, the three larger subunits (I, II, and III) of cytochrome c oxidase were labeled, while no radioactivity was incorporated into the other two subunits, IV and V. The results indicate that the increase in cytochrome c oxidase activity is due to an increase in the amount of the enzyme protein. We propose that excess amounts of subunits derived from the cytoplasm of the enzyme are present in intact tissue and are assembled with subunits of mitochondrial origin to form the holoenzyme after wounding of tissue.  相似文献   

10.
Addition of 1 eq of fluorescein mercuric acetate (FMA) to beef heart cytochrome oxidase was found to inhibit the steady-state electron transfer activity by 50%, but further additions up to 10 eq had no additional effect on activity. The partial inhibition caused by FMA is thus similar to that observed with other mercury compounds (Mann, A. J., and Auer, H. E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 454-458). The fluorescence of FMA was quenched by a factor of 10 upon binding to cytochrome oxidase, consistent with the involvement of a sulfhydryl group. However, addition of mercuric chloride to FMA-cytochrome oxidase resulted in an increase in fluorescence, suggesting that FMA was displaced from the high affinity binding site. Cytochrome c binding to FMA-cytochrome oxidase resulted in a 10% decrease in the fluorescence, possibly caused by Forster energy transfer from FMA to the cytochrome c heme. The binding site for FMA in cytochrome oxidase was investigated by carrying out sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis under progressively milder dissociation conditions. When FMA-cytochrome oxidase was dissociated with 3% sodium dodecyl sulfate and 6 M urea, FMA was predominantly bound to subunit II following electrophoresis. However, when the dissociation was carried out at 4 degrees C in the absence of urea with progressively smaller amounts of lithium dodecyl sulfate, the labeling of subunit II decreased and that of subunit I increased. These experiments demonstrate that mercury compounds bind to a high affinity site on cytochrome oxidase, possibly located in subunit I, but then migrate to subunit II under the normal sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis conditions. A definitive assignment of the high affinity binding site in the native enzyme cannot be made, however, because it is possible that mercury compounds can migrate from one sulfhydryl to another under even the mildest electrophoresis conditions.  相似文献   

11.
OXI mutants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae lack a functional cytochrome c oxidase. Wild type and OXI mutants were grown in the presence of radioactive delta-amino[14C]levulinic acid, a precursor of porphyrin and heme, and [3H]mevalonic acid, a precursor of the alkyl side-chain of heme a. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the delipidated mitochondria showed that delta-amino[14C]levulinic acid was distributed into three bands migrating in the regions of Mr 28 000, 13 500, and 10 000, while [3H]mevalonic acid was found in a single band with apparent Mr of 10 000. The immunoprecipitates obtained by incubating the solubilized mitochondria of any OXI mutant with antibodies against cytochrome c oxidase, showed, after delipidation, a high specific radioactivity due to delta-amino[14C]levulinic acid and [3H]mevalonic acid. This suggested that a prophyrin a was present in all these OXI mutants. HCl fractionation confirmed the presence of porphyrin a in the apooxidase of these mutants. Atomic absorption spectra of the immunoprecipitate of cytochrome c oxidase showed that copper was not detectable in the mutant OXI IIIa which lacked subunit 1, but was present in the mutant OXI IIIb, which exhibited a minor alteration in the electrophoretic mobility of subunit 1. In OXI I and II mutants there was a 50% reduction in the amount of copper in the immunoprecipitated cytochrome c oxidase. These observations may be interpretable as follows: (1) alterations in polypeptide biosynthesis due to the OXI mutations lead to an improper configuration of cytochrome c oxidase, so that ferrochelatase cannot transfer iron into porphyrin a; (2) subunit I is the binding site for copper, but the mutations in subunits II and III alter the binding site of one of the two copper atoms in subunit I.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome oxidase is purified from rat liver and beef heart by affinity chromatography on a matrix of horse cytochrome c-Sepharose 4B. The success of this procedure, which employs a matrix previously found ineffective with beef or yeast oxidase, is attributed to thorough dispersion of the enzyme with nonionic detergent and a low density of cross-linking between the lysine residues of cytochrome c and the cyanogen bromide activated Sepharose. Beef heart oxidase is purified in one step from mitochondrial membranes solubilized with lauryl maltoside, yielding an enzyme of purity comparable to that obtained on a yeast cytochrome c matrix [Azzi, A., Bill, K., & Broger, C. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2447-2450]. Rat liver oxidase is prepared by hydroxyapatite and horse cytochrome c affinity chromatography in lauryl maltoside, yielding enzyme of high purity (12.5-13.5 nmol of heme a/mg of protein), high activity (TN = 270-400 s-1), and very low lipid content (1 mol of DPG and 1 mol of PI per mol of aa3). The activity of the enzyme is characterized by two kinetic phases, and electron transfer can be stimulated to maximal rates as high as 650 s-1 when supplemented with asolectin vesicles. The rat liver oxidase purified by this method does not contain the polypeptide designated as subunit III. Comparisons of the kinetic behavior of the enzyme in intact membranes, solubilized membranes, and the purified delipidated form reveal complex changes in kinetic parameters accompanying the changes in state and assay conditions, but do not support previous suggestions that subunit III is a critical factor in the binding of cytochrome c at the high-affinity site on oxidase or that cardiolipin is essential for the low-affinity interaction of cytochrome c. The purified rat liver oxidase retains the ability to exhibit respiratory control when reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles, providing definitive evidence that subunit III is not solely responsible for the ability of cytochrome oxidase to produce or respond to a membrane potential or proton gradient.  相似文献   

13.
The structure and the orientation of cytochrome c oxidase molecules in crystalline cytochrome c oxidase membranes (Vanderkooi, G., Senior, A.E., Capaldi, R.A., and Hayashi, H. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 274, 38-48) were studied by image analysis of electron micrographs and by reacting the crystalline preparations with immune gamma-globulins against individual cytochrome c oxidase subunits. Binding of gamma-globulins to the membranes was detected by the following two methods: (a) electrophoretic identification of gamma-globulin polypeptides in the washed membranes; (b) electron microscopic examination of the negatively stained membranes. The membranes bound immune gamma-globulins against subunit IV (which faces the matrix side in intact mitochondria) but failed to bind immune gamma-globulins against subunits II + III (which face the outer side of the inner membrane in intact mitochondria). In contrast, solubilized cytochrome c oxidase bound either of the two immune gamma-globulins. All cytochrome c oxidase molecules in the crystalline membranes are thus asymmetrically arranged so that subunit IV faces outward and subunits II + III face toward the interior. This orientation is opposite to that found with intact mitochondria. The data also suggest that the crystalline membranes form closed vesicles which are impermeable to externally added gamma-globulins.  相似文献   

14.
Introducing site-directed mutations in surface-exposed residues of subunit II of the heme aa3 cytochrome c oxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans, we analyze the kinetic parameters of electron transfer from reduced horse heart cytochrome c. Specifically we address the following issues: (a) which residues on oxidase contribute to the docking site for cytochrome c, (b) is an aromatic side chain required for electron entry from cytochrome c, and (c) what is the molecular basis for the previously observed biphasic reaction kinetics. From our data we conclude that tryptophan 121 on subunit II is the sole entry point for electrons on their way to the CuA center and that its precise spatial arrangement, but not its aromatic nature, is a prerequisite for efficient electron transfer. With different reaction partners and experimental conditions, biphasicity can always be induced and is critically dependent on the ionic strength during the reaction. For an alternative explanation to account for this phenomenon, we find no evidence for a second cytochrome c binding site on oxidase.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochrome o complex of the Escherichia coli aerobic respiratory chain is a ubiquinol oxidase. The enzyme consists of at least four subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis and contains two heme b prosthetic groups (b555 and b562) plus copper. The sequence of the cyo operon, encoding the subunits of the oxidase, reveals five open reading frames, cyoABCDE. This paper describes results obtained by expressing independently cyoA and cyoB in the absence of the other subunits of the complex. Polyclonal antibodies which react with subunits I and II of the purified oxidase demonstrate that cyoA and cyoB correspond to subunit II and subunit I, respectively, of the complex. These subunits are stably inserted into the membrane when expressed. Furthermore, expression of cyoB (subunit I) results in elevated heme levels in the membrane. Reduced-minus-oxidized spectra suggest that the cytochrome b555 component is present but that the cytochrome b562 component is not. This heme component is shown to bind to CO, as it does in the intact enzyme. Hence, subunit I alone is sufficient for the assembly of the stable CO-binding heme component of this oxidase.  相似文献   

16.
Genetic manipulation of the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides was used to determine the minimal structural subunit associations required for the assembly of the heme A and copper centers of subunit I. In the absence of the genes for subunits II and III, expression of the gene for subunit I in Rb. sphaeroides allowed purification of a form of free subunit I (subunit I(a)()) that contained a single heme A. No copper was present in this protein, indicating that the heme a(3)-Cu(B) active site was not assembled. In cells expressing the genes for subunits I and II, but not subunit III, two oxidase forms were synthesized that were copurified by histidine affinity chromatography and separated by anion-exchange chromatography. One form was a highly active subunit I-II oxidase containing a full complement of structurally normal metal centers. This shows that association of subunit II with subunit I is required for stable formation of the active site in subunit I. In contrast, subunit III is not required for the formation of any of the metal centers or for the production of an oxidase with wild-type activity. The second product of the cells lacking subunit III was a large amount of a free form of subunit I that appeared identical to subunit I(a)(). Since significant amounts of subunit I(a)() were also isolated from wild-type cells, it is likely that subunit I(a)() will be present in any preparation of the aa(3)-type oxidase isolated via an affinity tag on subunit I.  相似文献   

17.
The presence of cytochrome c oxidase subunits and the association of these subunits with each other was studied in a heme-deficient Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant. This mutant had been isolated by Gollub et al. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 2846-2854) and had been shown lack delta-aminolevulinic acid synthetase. When grown in the absence of heme or heme precursors, the mutant is respiration-deficient, devoid of cytochrome absorption bands and auxotrophic for all those components whose biosynthesis is dependent on hemoproteins; when grown in the presence of heme or heme precursors, the mutant is phenotypically wild type. Upon growth of the mutant in the absence of heme synthesis, the mitochondria still contained two of the three mitochondrially made cytochrome c oxidase subunits (i.e. II and III) and at least one of the cytoplasmically made cytochrome c subunits (VI). The other subunits were either barely detectable (I, IV) or undetectable (V, VII). The residual subunits were apparently not assembled with each other since an antiserum directed mainly against Subunit VI failed to co-precipitate Subunits II and III which were still present. In contrast, growth of the mutant in the presence of delta-aminolevulinic acid led to the accumulation of active, fully assembled cytochrome c oxidase in the mitochondria. Heme a (or one of its precursors) thus controls the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase from its individual subunits.  相似文献   

18.
The genomes of several cyanobacteria show the existence of gene clusters encoding subunits I, II, and III of aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase. The enzyme occurs on both plasma and thylakoid membranes of these oxygenic phototrophic prokaryotes. Here we report the expression and purification of a truncated subunit II copper A (Cu(A)) domain (i.e. the electron entry and donor binding site) of cytochrome c oxidase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 in high yield. The water-soluble purple redox-active bimetallic center displays a relatively low standard reduction potential of 216 mV. Its absorption spectrum at pH 7 is similar to that of other soluble fragments from aa(3)-type oxidases, but the insensitivity of both absorbance and circular dichroism spectra to pH suggests that it is less exposed to the aqueous milieu compared with other Cu(A) domains. Oxidation of horse heart cytochrome c by the bimetallic center follows monophasic kinetics. At pH 7 and low ionic strength the bimolecular rate constant is (2.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(4) m-1 s(-1), and the rates decrease upon the increase of ionic strength. Sequence alignment and modeling of cyanobacterial Cu(A) domains show several peculiarities such as: (i) a large insertion located between the second transmembrane region and the putative hydrophobic cytochrome c docking site, (ii) the lack of acidic residues shown to be important in the interaction between cytochrome c and Paracoccus Cu(A) domain, and (iii) an extended C terminus similar to Escherichia coli ubiquinol oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated cytochrome c oxidase was fractionated by native-gel electrophoresis in Triton X-100, and a preparation of enzyme almost completely free of the usual impurities was recovered. This fraction was used to generate antibodies specific to cytochrome c oxidase. These antibodies inhibited cytochrome c oxidase activity rapidly and completely and immunoprecipitated an enzyme containing seven different subunits from detergent-solubilized mitochondria or submitochondrial particles. Reaction of detergent-solubilized cytochrome c oxidase with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate labeled all seven subunits although I and VI were much less reactive than the other five components. When cytochrome c oxidase was immunoprecipitated from mitochondria which had been reacted with [35S]DABS, subunits II and III were the only components labeled. When the complex was immunoprecipitated from labeled submitochondrial particles, II, III, IV, V, and VII were all labeled. Polypeptides I and VI were not labeled from either side of the membrane. These results confirm earlier studies which showed that cytochrome c oxidase spans the mitochondrial inner membrane and is asymmetrically arranged across this permeability barrier.  相似文献   

20.
The cytochrome o complex is one of two ubiquinol oxidases in the aerobic respiratory system of Escherichia coli. This enzyme catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 which is located in the cytoplasmic membrane, and the four-electron reduction of molecular oxygen to water. The purified oxidase contains at least four subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis and has been shown to couple electron flux to the generation of a proton motive force across the membrane. In this paper, the DNA sequence of the cyo operon, containing the structural genes for the oxidase, is reported. This operon is shown to encode five open reading frames, cyoABCDE. The gene products of three of these, cyoA, cyoB, and cyoC, are clearly related to subunits II, I, and III, respectively, of the eukaryotic and prokaryotic aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. This family of cytochrome c oxidases contain heme a and copper as prosthetic groups, whereas the E. coli enzyme contains heme b (protoheme IX) and copper. The most striking sequence similarities relate the large subunits (I) of both the E. coli quinol oxidase and the cytochrome c oxidases. It is likely that the sequence similarities reflect a common molecular architecture of the two heme binding sites and of a copper binding site in these enzymes. In addition, the cyoE open reading frame is closely related to a gene denoted ORF1 from Paracoccus dentrificans which is located in between the genes encoding subunits II and III of the cytochrome c oxidase of this organism. The function of the ORF1 gene product is not known. These sequence relationships define a superfamily of membrane-bound respiratory oxidases which share structural features but which have different functions. The E. coli cytochrome o complex oxidizes ubiquinol but has no ability to catalyze the oxidation of reduced cytochrome c. Nevertheless, it is clear that the E. coli oxidase and the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases must have very similar structures, at least in the vicinity of the catalytic centers, and they are very likely to have similar mechanisms for bioenergetic coupling (proton pumping).  相似文献   

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