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1.
The complete primary structure of the cytoplasmically synthesized polypeptide VIc from beef heart cytochrome c oxidase was determined via isolation and sequencing of overlapping methionine and glutamic acid fragments. The protein consists of 73 amino acids (Mr 8 480). Through the protein contains, from residues 21 to 40, a hydrophobic sequence interrupted by one lysine it may not penetrate the membrane. A sequence of 33 amino acids highly homologous to the C-terminal part of VIc has been translated from a cDNA clone of a nuclear coded subunit of the enzyme from rat liver. The function of this component of the terminal oxidase is yet unknown.  相似文献   

2.
Monoclonal antibodies to subunits of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase were prepared by immunizing mice with the isolated enzyme. The majority of antibody-producing cell lines were found to react with two different subunits of similar molecular mass, as shown by Western blotting and ELISA titrations with the HPLC-purified subunits. The affinities of the monoclonal antibodies to the subunits were determined by ELISA titrations with increasing concentrations of NH4SCN. Two monoclonal antibodies with a low affinity to subunit VIa had a high affinity to subunit VIc, whereas two other antibodies showed the same affinity to subunits VIIa and VIIb. The same affinity of monoclonal antibodies suggested an evolutionary relationship of subunits VIIa and VIIb, which was further supported by reactivity of these antibodies to subunits VIIa and VIIb of cytochrome c oxidase from different species and tissues. Also the evolutionary relationship between subunit VIa and VIc was shown by hybridization at low stringency of cDNAs for rat cytochrome c oxidase subunits VIc and VIa-h (heart-type), after amplification by the polymerase chain reaction, with a probe of VIa-l (liver-type).  相似文献   

3.
Bovine cytochrome c oxidase subunits were separated by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography using a C4 column eluted with water and an acetonitrile gradient, both containing 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid. Subunits I and III precipitated in this solvent and could not be analyzed; the remaining eleven subunits were dissociated, denatured, soluble and could be resolved by elution from the column. The protein subunit eluting in each chromatographic peak was identified by a combination of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate, NH2-terminal amino acid sequencing, and amino acid analysis. Each subunit produced a single elution peak with the exception of subunit VIc (nomenclature of Kadenbach et al., 1983, Anal. Biochem. 129, 517-521), which eluted from the column as two well-resolved peaks. Sequence analysis showed that the two subunit VIc elution peaks resulted from partial chemical blockage of the alpha-amino serine residue of subunit VIc. The C4 reverse phase HPLC was used to document specific subunit removal from bovine cytochrome c oxidase either by tryptic digestion or by dodecyl maltoside extraction. The described HPLC method for separating cytochrome c oxidase subunits should be applicable for the analysis of other multisubunit proteins, especially other multisubunit membrane protein complexes.  相似文献   

4.
The gene (coxII) encoding subunit II of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3) has been isolated by screening a genomic DNA library in phage lambda with a probe derived from coxII of Paracoccus denitrificans. A 2-kb fragment containing coxII DNA was subcloned into the phage M13mp18 and the sequence determined. The 2-kb insert contains the entire coding region for coxII gene, including the ATG start codon and a TGA stop codon. The deduced amino acid (aa) sequence of subunit II of R. sphaeroides shows regions of substantial homology to the corresponding subunit of the bovine mitochondrial oxidase (63% overall) and P. denitrificans oxidase (68% overall). The postulated redox-active copper ion (CuA) binding site involving two Cys and two His residues (as well as an alternative Met residue) is conserved among these species, along with four invariant acidic aa residues (two Asp and two Glu) that may be involved in interactions with cytochrome c, and a region of aromatic residues (Tyr-Gln-Trp-Tyr-Trp-Gly-Tyr-Glu-Tyr) which is postulated to play a role in electron transfer. Hydropathy profile analysis suggests that while the bovine COXII secondary structure contains two transmembrane helices, the R. sphaeroides subunit II has a third such helix that may function as part of a signal sequence, as suggested for P. denitrificans.  相似文献   

5.
6.
It has recently become evident that many bacterial respiratory oxidases are members of a superfamily that is related to the eukaryotic cytochrome c oxidase. These oxidases catalyze the reduction of oxygen to water at a heme-copper binuclear center. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy has been used to examine the heme-copper-containing respiratory oxidases of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Ga. This technique monitors the stretching frequency of CO bound at the oxygen binding site and can be used to characterize the oxidases in situ with membrane preparations. Oxidases that have a heme-copper binuclear center are recognizable by FTIR spectroscopy because the bound CO moves from the heme iron to the nearby copper upon photolysis at low temperature, where it exhibits a diagnostic spectrum. The FTIR spectra indicate that the binuclear center of the R. sphaeroides aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase is remarkably similar to that of the bovine mitochondrial oxidase. Upon deletion of the ctaD gene, encoding subunit I of the aa3-type oxidase, substantial cytochrome c oxidase remains in the membranes of aerobically grown R. sphaeroides. This correlates with a second wild-type R. sphaeroides is grown photosynthetically, the chromatophore membranes lack the aa3-type oxidase but have this second heme-copper oxidase. Subunit I of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily contains the binuclear center. Amino acid sequence alignments show that this subunit is structurally very highly conserved among both eukaryotic and prokaryotic species. The polymerase chain reaction was used to show that the chromosome of R. sphaeroides contains at least one other gene that is a homolog of ctaD, the gene encoding subunit I of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
N J Bachman  M I Lomax  L I Grossman 《Gene》1987,55(2-3):219-229
We have isolated and analyzed 17 clones from a bovine genomic library in phage lambda Charon28 probed with a bovine liver cDNA for cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV. Restriction enzyme mapping and Southern analysis indicated that these clones represent only two genomic regions. One region was shown by nucleotide sequencing to contain a subunit IV pseudogene of the processed type. The other class of clones contained the 5' region of a putative expressed gene; the region consists of two exons and two introns, with one exon encoding exclusively the domain representing the presequence present on newly synthesized subunit-IV polypeptides. Genomic Southern analysis indicated that these two clones probably represent the only sequences in the bovine nucleus that share nucleotide sequence identity with the liver subunit IV cDNA when utilizing moderately stringent hybridization conditions.  相似文献   

8.
A cytochrome in an extremely halophilic archaeon, Haloferax volcanii, was purified to homogeneity. This protein displayed a redox difference spectrum that is characteristic of a-type cytochromes and a CN(-) complex spectrum that indicates the presence of heme a and heme a(3). This cytochrome aa(3) consisted of 44- and 35-kDa subunits. The amino acid sequence of the 44-kDa subunit was similar to that of the heme-copper oxidase subunit I, and critical amino acid residues for metal binding, such as histidines, were highly conserved. The reduced cytochrome c partially purified from the bacterial membrane fraction was oxidized by the cytochrome aa(3), providing physiological evidence for electron transfer from cytochrome c to cytochrome aa(3) in archaea.  相似文献   

9.
The cytochrome o complex is a bo-type ubiquinol oxidase in the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. This complex has a close structural and functional relationship with the eukaryotic and prokaryotic aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. The specific activity, subunit composition, and metal content of the purified cytochrome o complex are not consistent for different preparative protocols reported in the literature. This paper presents a relatively simple preparation of the enzyme starting with a strain of Escherichia coli which overproduces the oxidase. The pure enzyme contains four subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Partial amino acid sequence data confirm the identities of subunit I, II, and III from the SDS-PAGE analysis as the cyoB, cyoA, and cyoC gene products, respectively. A slight modification of the purification protocol yields an oxidase preparation that contains a possible fifth subunit which may be the cyoE gene product. The pure four-subunit enzyme contains 2 equivs of iron but only 1 equiv of copper. There is no electron paramagnetic resonance detectable copper in the purified enzyme. Hence, the equivalent of CuA of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases is absent in this quinol oxidase. There is also no zinc in the purified quinol oxidase. Finally, monoclonal antibodies are reported that interact with subunit II. One of these monoclonals inhibits the quinol oxidase activity of the detergent-solubilized, purified oxidase. Hence, although subunit II does not contain CuA and does not interact with cytochrome c, it still must have an important function in the bo-type ubiquinol oxidase.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The ctaD gene encoding subunit I of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides has been cloned. The gene encodes a polypeptide of 565 residues which is highly homologous to the sequences of subunit I from other prokaryotic and eukaryotic sources, e.g. 51% identity with that from bovine, and 75% identity with that from Paracoccus denitrificans. The ctaD gene was deleted from the chromosome of R. sphaeroides, resulting in a strain that spectroscopically lacks cytochrome a. This strain maintains about 50% of the cytochrome c oxidase activity of the wild-type strain owing to the presence of an alternate o-type cytochrome c oxidase. The aa3-type oxidase was restored by complementing the chromosomal deletion with a plasmid-borne copy of the ctaD gene. This system is well suited for site-directed mutagenesis probing of the structure and function of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
We have cloned and sequenced COX12, the nuclear gene for subunit VIb of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytochrome c oxidase. This subunit, which was previously not found in cytochrome c oxidase purified from S. cerevisiae, has a deduced amino acid sequence which is 41% identical to the sequences of subunits VIb of bovine and human cytochrome c oxidases. The chromosomal copy of COX12 was replaced with a plasmid-derived copy of COX12, in which the coding region for the suspected cytochrome oxidase subunit was replaced with the yeast URA3 gene. The resulting Ura+ deletion strain grew poorly at room temperature and was unable to grow at 37 degrees C on ethanol/glycerol medium, whereas growth was normal at both temperatures on dextrose. This temperature-dependent, petite phenotype of the deletion strain was complemented to wild-type growth with a single copy plasmid carrying COX12. Cytochrome c oxidase activity in mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain is decreased to 5-15% of that in membranes from the wild-type parent, and this activity is restored to normal when the cox12 deletion strain is complemented by the plasmid-borne COX12. Optical spectra of mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain revealed that optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase is assembled at room temperature and at 37 degrees C, although the heme a + a3 absorption is diminished approximately 50%. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by COX12 is identical to the N-terminal sequence of a subunit found in yeast cytochrome c oxidase purified by a new procedure (Taanman, J.-W., and Capaldi, R. A. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 22481-22485). We conclude that COX12 encodes a subunit of yeast cytochrome c oxidase which is essential during assembly for full cytochrome c oxidase activity but apparently can be removed after the oxidase is assembled, with retention of oxidase activity. This is the first instance in which deletion of a subunit of cytochrome c oxidase results in assembly of optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase but having markedly diminished activity.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Are there isoenzymes of cytochrome c oxidase in Paracoccus denitrificans?   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
M Raitio  J M Pispa  T Metso  M Saraste 《FEBS letters》1990,261(2):431-435
We have used a gene replacement strategy to delete the previously isolated gene [(1987) EMBO J. 6, 2825-2833] for the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I from Paracoccus denitrificans. The resulting mutant was still able to synthesize active cytochrome c oxidase. This led us to look for another locus which could completely suppress the mutation. In this study we report the isolation of a second gene encoding subunit I. An open reading frame coding for cytochrome c 550 was found upstream from this gene. We suggest that there are isoenzymes of cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3) in this bacterium.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The immunohistochemical reaction of monoclonal as well as polyclonal antibodies against cytochrome c oxidase (COX) subunits with serial sections of normal human skeletal muscle was investigated. The stronger reactivity of polyclonal antibodies to COX subunits II-III and VIIbc with type I as compared to type II fibres, correlated well with the higher histochemical reactivity of NADH dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase in type I fibres. In contrast an almost exclusive reaction of a monoclonal antibody against subunit IV with type I fibre and a preponderant reaction of a polyclonal antibody against subunits Vab with type II fibres was obtained. Antibodies against subunits I, Vb and VIc did not reveal a fibre-type-specific reactivity. The data indicate in human muscle the occurrence of fibre type-specific isozymes of cytochrome c oxidase differing in subunits IV and Va or Vb.  相似文献   

17.
The cytochrome o complex of Escherichia coli is a ubiquinol oxidase which is the predominant respiratory terminal oxidase when the bacteria are grown under high oxygen tension. The amino acid sequences of three of the subunits of this quinol oxidase reveal a substantial relationship to the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. The two cytochrome components (b563.5 and o) and the single copper (CuB) present in the E. coli quinol oxidase appear to be equivalent to cytochrome a, cytochrome a3, and CuB of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases, respectively. These three prosthetic groups are all located within subunit I of the oxidase. Sequence alignments indicate only six totally conserved histidine residues among all known sequences of subunit I of the cytochrome c oxidases of various species plus the E. coli quinol oxidase. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to change each of these totally conserved histidines with the presumption that two of these six must ligate to the low spin cytochrome center of the E. coli oxidase. The presence of the low spin cytochrome b563.5 component of the oxidase can be evaluated both by visible absorbance properties and by its EPR spectrum. The results unambiguously indicate that His-106 and His-421 are the ligands of the six-coordinate low spin cytochrome b563.5. Although the data are not definitive in making additional metal ligation assignments of the remaining four totally conserved histidines, a reasonable model is suggested for the structure of the catalytic core of the cytochrome o complex and, by extrapolation, of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

18.
The terminal cytochrome c1aa3 of the respiratory chain of Thermus thermophilus has been isolated and purified to homogeneity by a novel procedure. The two subunit proteins (55 and 33 kDa) have been characterized chemically. Computer searches with partial amino acid sequences obtained from both subunits show that the larger subunit belongs to the cytochrome oxidase subunit I protein family while the smaller covalently heme-binding subunit is not a cytochrome c1 but appears to be a fused protein between cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase subunit II. With respect to the 16-S rRNA-derived phylogeny of procaryotes, the results show that the genetic information for an O2-reacting cytochrome oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) existed already in early eubacteria.  相似文献   

19.
We partially purified and characterized the cytochrome aa3 from the facultatively aerobic and hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrobaculum oguniense. This cytochrome aa3 showed oxygen consumption activity with N, N, N', N'-tetramethyl-1,4-phenylenediamine and ascorbate as substrates, and also displayed bovine cytochrome c oxidase activity. These enzymatic activities of cytochrome aa3 were inhibited by cyanide and azide. This cytochrome contained heme As, but not typical heme A. An analysis of trypsin-digested fragments indicated that 1 subunit of this cytochrome was identical to the gene product of subunit I of the SoxM-type heme--copper oxidase (poxC). This is the first report of a terminal oxidase in hyperthermophilic crenarchaeon belonging to the order Thermoproteales.  相似文献   

20.
Membranes were isolated by French pressure cell extrusion of lysozyme-preincubated cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6714 after growth in the presence of 0.4 M NaCl for 4 days. These cells showed up to 6-fold respiratory activity (oxygen uptake) when compared to control cells. Separation of plasma and thylakoid membranes revealed that the major part of cytochrome c oxidase was associated with the latter. Immunoblotting of sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophorized membranes with antisera raised against subunit I, subunit II, and the holoenzyme of the aa3-type cytochrome oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans gave specific and complementary cross-reactions at apparent molecular weights of about 25 and 17-18 kDa, respectively. Crude membranes were solubilized also with n-octyl glucoside, and the cytochrome oxidase was separated from the extract by affinity chromatography using immobilized cytochrome c from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzyme was eluted with KCl/octyl glucoside. Dialysed and concentrated enzyme solution, which was free of b- and c-type cytochromes, gave reduced alpha- and gamma-peaks around 603 and 443 nm, respectively. Upon treatment of the sample with carbon monoxide the peaks were found at 593 and 433 nm, respectively. Photodissociation spectra of the CO-complexed enzyme were in full agreement with cytochrome aa3 being a functional cytochrome oxidase in Synechocystis 6714.  相似文献   

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