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1.
Cytochrome c oxidase forms tight binding complexes with the cytochrome c analog, porphyrin cytochrome c. The behaviour of the reduced and pulsed forms of the oxidase with porphyrin cytochrome c have been followed as functions of ionic strength; this behaviour has been compared with that of the resting oxidase [Kornblatt, Hui Bon Hoa and English (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5906-5911]. All forms of the cytochrome oxidase studied bind one porphyrin cytochrome c per 'functional' cytochrome oxidase (two heme a); it appears as though porphyrin cytochrome c and cytochrome c compete for the same site on the oxidase. The resting enzyme binds cytochrome c 8 times more strongly than porphyrin cytochrome c; the reduced enzyme, in contrast, binds the two with almost equal affinity. In all three cases, resting, pulsed and reduced, the heme-to-porphyrin distance is estimated to be about 3 nm. The tight-binding complexes formed between cytochrome oxidase and porphyrin cytochrome c can be dissociated by salt. Debye-Hückel analysis of salt titrations indicate that the resting enzyme and the reduced enzyme are similar in that the product of the interaction charges on the two proteins is about -14. The product of the charges for the pulsed enzyme is -25, indicating that on average another positive and negative charge take part in the interaction of the two proteins. While there is one tight binding site for cytochrome c per two heme a, cytochrome c is able to 'communicate' with four heme a. In the absence of cytochrome c, electron transfer from tetramethylphenylenediamine to the oxidase to oxygen results in the conversion of the resting form to the 'oxygenated'; in the presence of cytochrome c, the same electron transfer results in the appearance of the 'pulsed' form. Cytochrome c titrations of the enzyme show that a ratio of only one cytochrome c to four heme a is sufficient to convert all the oxidase to the 'pulsed' form. Porphyrin cytochrome c, like cytochrome c, catalyzes the same conversion with the same stoichiometry. The binding data and salt effects indicate that major structural alterations occur in the oxidase as it is converted from the resting to the partially reduced and subsequently to the pulsed form.  相似文献   

2.
The isolated complexes of ferricytochrome c with cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 or complex III), and cytochrome c1 (a subunit of cytochrome c reductase) were investigated by the method of differential chemical modification (Bosshard, H.R. (1979) Methods Biochem. Anal. 25, 273-301). By this method the chemical reactivity of each of the 19 lysyl side chains of horse cytochrome c was compared in free and in complexed cytochrome c and binding sites were deduced from altered chemical reactivities of particular lysyl side chains in complexed cytochrome c. The most important findings follow. 1. The binding sites on cytochrome c for cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome c reductase, defined in terms of the involvement of particular lysyl residues, are indistinguishable. The two oxidation-reduction partners of cytochrome c interact at the front (exposed heme edge) and top left part of the molecule, shielding mainly lysyl residues 8, 13, 72 + 73, 86, and 87. The chemical reactivity of lysyl residues 22, 39, 53, 55, 60, 99, and 100 is unaffected by complex formation while the remaining lysyl residues in positions 5, 7, 25, 27, 79, and 88 are somewhat less reactive in the complexed molecule. 2. When bound to cytochrome c reductase or to the isolated cytochrome c1 subunit of the reductase the same lysyl side chains of cytochrome c are shielded. This indicates that cytochrome c binds to the c1 subunit of the reductase during the electron transfer process.  相似文献   

3.
Electrostatically stabilized complexes of fully oxidized cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans and horse heart cytochrome c were studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The experiments were carried out with the wild-type oxidase and a variant in which a negatively charged amino acid in the binding domain (D257) is replaced by an asparagine. It is shown that cytochrome c induces structural changes at heme a and heme a(3) which are reminiscent to those found in mammalian cytochrome c oxidase-cytochrome c complex. The spectral changes are attributed to subtle changes in the heme-protein interactions implying that there is a structural communication from the binding domain even to the remote catalytic center. Only for the heme a modes minor spectral differences were found in the response of the wild-type and the D257N variant oxidase upon cytochrome c binding indicating that electrostatic interactions of aspartate 257 are not crucial for the perturbation of the catalytic site structure in the complex. On the other hand, in none of the complexes, structural changes were detected in the bound cytochrome c. These findings are in contrast to previous results obtained with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase which triggers the formation of a new conformational state of cytochrome c assumed to be involved in the biological electron transfer process.  相似文献   

4.
R Bisson  B Jacobs  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1980,19(18):4173-4178
Two arylazidocytochrome c derivatives, one modified at lysine-13 and the second modified at lysine-22, were reacted with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase. The lysine-13 modified arylazidocytochrome c was found to cross-link both to the enzyme and with lipid bound to the cytochrome c oxidase complex. The lysine-22 derivative reacted only with lipids. Cross-linking to protein was through subunit II of the cytochrome c oxidase complex, as first reported by Bisson et al. [Bisson, R., Azzi, A., Gutweniger, H., Colonna, R., Monteccuco, C., & Zanotti, A. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 1874]. Binding studies show that the cytochrome c derivative covalently bound to subunit II was in the high-affinity binding site for the substrate. Evidence is also presented to suggest that cytochrome c bound to the lipid was in the low-affinity binding site [as defined by Ferguson-Miller et al. [Ferguson-Miller, S., Brautigan, D. L., & Margoliash, E. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 1104]]. Covalent binding of the cytochrome c derivative into the high-affinity binding site was found to inhibit electron transfer even when native cytochrome c was added as a substrate. Inhibition was almost complete when 1 mol of the Lys-13 modified arylazidocytochrome c was covalently bound to the enzyme per cytochrome c oxidase dimer (i.e., congruent to 280 000 daltons). Covalent binding of either derivative with lipid (low-affinity site) had very little effect on the overall electron transfer activity of cytochrome c oxidase. These results are discussed in terms of current theories of cytochrome c-cytochrome c oxidase interactions.  相似文献   

5.
Methyl-4-azidobenzoimidate was reacted with horse heart cytochrome c to give a photoaffinity-labeled derivative of this heme protein. The modified cytochrome c bound to cytochrome c-depleted mitochondria with the same Kd as native cytochrome c and restored oxygen uptake to the same extent. Irradiation of cytochrome c-depleted mitochondrial membranes with 3- to 4-fold excess of photoaffinity-labeled cytochrome c over cytochrome c oxidase resulted in covalent binding of the derivative to the membranes. Fractionation of the irradiated mitochondria in the presence of detergents and salts followed by chromatography on an agarose Bio-Gel-A-5m showed that the labeled cytochrome c was bound covalently to succinate-cytochrome c reductase. The covalently bound cytochrome c was active in mediating electron transfer between its reductase and oxidase. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the succinate-cytochrome c reductase containing photoaffinity-labeled 125I-cytochrome c showed that the reductase contained a protein binding site for cytochrome c. It is suggested that cytochrome c1 is the most likely site for the cytochrome c binding in mitochondria in situ.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of ionic strength on the one-electron reduction of oxidized bovine cytochrome c oxidase by reduced bovine cytochrome c has been studied by using flavin semiquinone reductants generated in situ by laser flash photolysis. In the absence of cytochrome c, direct reduction of the heme a prosthetic group of the oxidase by the one-electron reductant 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone occurred slowly, despite a driving force of approximately +1 V. This is consistent with a sterically inaccessible heme a center. This reduction process was independent of ionic strength from 10 to 100 mM. Addition of cytochrome c resulted in a marked increase in the amount of reduced oxidase generated per laser flash. Reduction of the oxidase at the heme a site was monophasic, whereas oxidation of cytochrome c was multiphasic, the fastest phase corresponding in rate constant to the reduction of the heme a. During the fast kinetic phase, 2 equiv of cytochrome c was oxidized per heme a reduced. We presume that the second equivalent was used to reduce the Cua center, although this was not directly measured. The first-order rate-limiting process which controls electron transfer to the heme a showed a marked ionic strength effect, with a maximum rate constant occurring at mu = 110 mM (1470 s-1), whereas the rate constant obtained at mu = 10 mM was 630 s-1 and at mu = 510 mM was 45 s-1. There was no effect of "pulsing" the enzyme on this rate-limiting one-electron transfer process. These results suggest that there are structural differences in the complex(es) formed between mitochondrial cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase at very low and more physiologically relevant ionic strengths, which lead to differences in electron-transfer rate constants.  相似文献   

7.
A novel method for initiating intramolecular electron transfer in cytochrome c oxidase is reported. The method is based upon photoreduction of cytochrome c labeled with thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate in complex with cytochrome oxidase. The thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-labeled cytochrome c was prepared by incubating the thiol reactive form of the dye with yeast iso-1-cytochrome c, containing a single cysteine residue. Laser pulse excitation of a stoichiometrical complex between thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-cytochrome c and bovine heart cytochrome oxidase at low ionic strength resulted in the reduction of cytochrome c by the excited form of thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate and subsequent intramolecular electron transfer from the reduced cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. The maximum efficiency by a single laser pulse resulted in the reduction of approximately 17% of cytochrome a, and was achieved only at a 1 : 1 ratio of cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. At higher cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase ratios the heme a reduction was strongly suppressed.  相似文献   

8.
Cooperative linkage of solute binding at separate binding sites in allosteric proteins is an important functional attribute of soluble and membrane bound hemoproteins. Analysis of proton/electron coupling at the four redox centers, i.e. Cu(A), heme a, heme a(3) and Cu(B), in the purified bovine cytochrome c oxidase in the unliganded, CO-liganded and CN-liganded states is presented. These studies are based on direct measurement of scalar proton translocation associated with oxido-reduction of the metal centers and pH dependence of the midpoint potential of the redox centers. Heme a (and Cu(A)) exhibits a cooperative proton/electron linkage (Bohr effect). Bohr effect seems also to be associated with the oxygen-reduction chemistry at the heme a(3)-Cu(B) binuclear center. Data on electron transfer in cytochrome c oxidase are also presented, which, together with structural data, provide evidence showing the occurrence of direct electron transfer from Cu(A) to the binuclear center in addition to electron transfer via heme a. A survey of structural and functional data showing the essential role of cooperative proton/electron linkage at heme a in the proton pump of cytochrome c oxidase is presented. On the basis of this and related functional and structural information, variants for cooperative mechanisms in the proton pump of the oxidase are examined.  相似文献   

9.
We have devised a relatively simple method for the purification of cytochrome aa3 of Paracoccus denitrificans with three major subunits similar to those of the larger subunits of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase. This preparation has no c-type cytochrome. Studies were made of the oxidation of soluble cytochromes c from bovine heart and Paracoccus. The cytochrome-c oxidase activity was stimulated by low concentrations of either cytochrome c, providing an explanation for the multiphasic nature of plots of v/S versus v. Kinetics of the oxidation of bovine cytochrome c by the Paracoccus oxidase resembled those of bovine oxidase with bovine cytochrome c in every way; the Paracoccus oxidase with bovine cytochrome c can serve as an appropriate model for the mitochondrial system. The kinetics of the oxidation of the soluble Paracoccus cytochrome c by the Paracoccus oxidase were different from those seen with bovine cytochrome c, but resembled the latter if poly(L-lysine) was added to the assays. The important difference between the two species of cytochrome c is the more highly negative hemisphere on the side of the molecule way from the heme crevice in the Paracoccus cytochrome. Thus, the data emphasize the importance of all of the charged groups on cytochrome c in influencing the binding or electron transfer reactions of this oxidation-reduction system. The data also permit some interesting connotations about the possible evolution from the bacterial to the mitochondrial electron transport system.  相似文献   

10.
We have prepared three different cytochrome c derivatives, each containing a single specifically trifluoroacetylated lysine at residues 13, 55, and 99, respectively. The only modification that affected cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) activity was that of lysine-13 at the top of the heme crevice. Trifluoroacetylation of lysine-13 increased the apparent Michaelis constant fivefold compared to that of native cytochrome c, but did not affect the maximum velocity. Trifluoroacetylation of lysine-55 at the left side of the cytochrome c molecule did not affect cytochrome oxidase activity in any way, nor did trifluoroacetylation of lysine-99 at the rear of the cytochrome c molecule. This indicates that the cytochrome oxidase binding site on cytochrome c involved only the front of the cytochrome c molecule and those lysines immediately surrounding the heme crevice.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c is an important electron transfer protein in the respiratory chain, shuttling electrons from cytochrome c reductase to cytochrome c oxidase. Extensive chemical modification studies indicate significant electrostatic interactions between these proteins and show that all structural and conformational changes of cytochrome c can influence the electron transport. In the present work we examine the effect of an anticancer ruthenium complex, trans-Indazolium (bisindazole) tetrachlororuthenate(III) (HInd[RuInd(2)Cl(4)]), on the conformation of cytochrome c, the state of the heme moiety, formation of the protein dimer and on the folding state of apocytochrome c. For this purpose, gel-filtration chromatography, absorption second derivative spectroscopy, circular dichroism (CD) and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP(AES)) were used. The present data have revealed that binding of the potential anticancer drug HInd[RuInd(2)Cl(4)] complex to cytochrome c induces a conformation of the protein with less organized secondary and tertiary structure.  相似文献   

12.
Lepp H  Svahn E  Faxén K  Brzezinski P 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4929-4935
Cytochrome c oxidase couples electron transfer from cytochrome c to O 2 to proton pumping across the membrane. In the initial part of the reaction of the reduced cytochrome c oxidase with O 2, an electron is transferred from heme a to the catalytic site, parallel to the membrane surface. Even though this electron transfer is not linked to proton uptake from solution, recently Belevich et al. [(2006) Nature 440, 829] showed that it is linked to transfer of charge perpendicular to the membrane surface (electrogenic reaction). This electrogenic reaction was attributed to internal transfer of a proton from Glu286, in the D proton pathway, to an unidentified protonatable site "above" the heme groups. The proton transfer was proposed to initiate the sequence of events leading to proton pumping. In this study, we have investigated electrogenic reactions in structural variants of cytochrome c oxidase in which residues in the second, K proton pathway of cytochrome c oxidase were modified. The results indicate that the electrogenic reaction linked to electron transfer to the catalytic site originates from charge transfer within the K pathway, which presumably facilitates reduction of the site.  相似文献   

13.
The stoichiometry of carbon monoxide binding to beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been reinvestigated both by titration of the reduced oxidase with CO and by measuring the amount of carboxyhemoglobin that is formed after adding oxyhemoglobin to a solution of the CO-enzyme complex. In the titration experiments the ratio of CO bounds to total heme a present was always less than 0.50 while in the experiments where oxyhemoglobin was added the results were variable and of lower accuracy. These observations do not agree with the recent conclusion of Volpe, J.A., O'Toole, M.C., and Caughey, W.S. (1975) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 62, 48-53 that CO is bound in a 1:1 ratio with heme a. An explanation for their results is suggested.  相似文献   

14.
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase was labeled at a single sulfhydryl group by treatment with 5 mM N-iodoacetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (1,5-I-AEDANS) at pH 8.0 for 4 h. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis revealed that the enzyme was exclusively labeled at subunit III, presumably at Cys-115. The high affinity phase of the electron transfer reaction with horse cytochrome c was not affected by acetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (AEDANS) labeling. Addition of horse cytochrome c to dimeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase resulted in a 55% decrease in the AEDANS fluorescence due to the formation of a 1:1 complex between the two proteins. Forster energy transfer calculations indicated that the distance from the AEDANS label on subunit III to the heme group of cytochrome c was in the range 26-40 A. In contrast to the results with the dimeric enzyme, the fluorescence of monomeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase was not quenched at all by binding horse heart cytochrome c, indicating that the AEDANS label on subunit III was at least 54 A from the heme group of cytochrome c. These results support a model in which the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of cytochrome c interact with carboxylates on subunit II of one monomer of the cytochrome c oxidase dimer and the back of the molecule is close to subunit III on the other monomer. In order to identify the cysteine residues that ligand copper A, a new procedure was developed to specifically remove copper A from cytochrome c oxidase by incubation with 2-mercaptoethanol followed by gel chromatography. Treatment of the copper A-depleted cytochrome c oxidase preparation with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling sulfhydryl groups on subunit II as well as on subunit III. No additional subunits were labeled. This result indicates that the copper A binding site is located at cysteines 196 and/or 200 of subunit II and that removal of copper A exposes these residues for labeling by 1,5-I-AEDANS. Alternative copper A depletion methods involving incubation with bathocuproine sulfonate (Weintraub, S.T., and Wharton, D.C. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1669-1676) or p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate (Li, P.M., Gelles, J., Chan, S.I., Sullivan, R.J., and Scott, R.A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2091-2095) were also investigated. Treatment of these preparations with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling cysteine residues on subunits II and III. However, additional sulfhydryl residues on other subunits were also labeled, preventing a definitive assignment of the location of copper A using these depletion procedures.  相似文献   

15.
Mixed quantum mechanical/molecular mechanics calculations were used to explore the electron pathway of the terminal electron transfer enzyme, cytochrome c oxidase. This enzyme catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to water in a multiple step process. Density functional calculations on the three redox centers allowed for the characterization of the electron transfer mechanism, following the sequence Cu(A)→heme a→heme a(3). This process is largely affected by the presence of positive charges, confirming the possibility of a proton coupled electron transfer. An extensive mapping of all residues involved in the electron transfer, between the Cu(A) center (donor) and the O(2) reduction site heme a(3)-Cu(B) (receptor), was obtained by selectively activating/deactivating different quantum regions. The method employed, called QM/MM e-pathway, allowed the identification of key residues along the possible electron transfer paths, consistent with experimental data. In particular, the role of arginines 481 and 482 appears crucial in the Cu(A)→heme a and in the heme a→heme a(3) electron transfer processes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Intramolecular electron transfer in the electrostatic cytochrome c oxidase/cytochrome c complex was investigated using a novel photoactivatable dye. Laser photolysis of thiouredopyrenetrisulfonate (TUPS), covalently linked to cysteine 102 on yeast iso-1-cytochrome c, generates a triplet state of the dye, which donates an electron to cytochrome c, followed by electron transfer to cytochrome c oxidase. Time-resolved optical absorption difference spectra were collected at delay times from 100 ns to 200 ms between 325 and 650 nm. On the basis of singular value decomposition (SVD) and multiexponential fitting, three apparent lifetimes were resolved. A sequential kinetic mechanism is proposed from which the microscopic rate constants and spectra of the intermediates were determined. The triplet state of TUPS donates an electron to cytochrome c with a forward rate constant of approximately 2.0 x 10(4) s(-1). A significant fraction of the triplet returns back to the ground state on a similar time scale. The reduction of cytochrome c is followed by faster electron transfer from cytochrome c to Cu(A), with the equilibrium favoring the reduced cytochrome c. Subsequently, Cu(A) equilibrates with heme a with an apparent rate constant of approximately 1 x 10(4) s(-1). On a millisecond time scale, the oxidized TUPS returns to the ground state and heme a becomes reoxidized. The extracted intermediate spectra are in excellent agreement with model spectra of the postulated intermediates, supporting the proposed mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Binding to cytochrome c oxidase induces a conformational change in the cytochrome c molecule. This conformational change has been characterized by comparing the binding of native cytochrome c and chemically modified cytochrome c derivatives to bovine cytochrome c oxidase by using absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy. The following derivatives were analyzed: (i) cytochrome c modified at all 19 lysine residues to yield the (N epsilon-acetimidyl)19 cytochrome c, (N epsilon-isopropyl)19 cytochrome c, and (N epsilon,N epsilon-dimethyl)19 cytochrome c; (ii) cytochrome c in which Met65 and Met80 are converted to the methionine sulfoxide; (iii) cytochrome c with a single break in the polypeptide chain at Arg38 or Gly37. The derivatives bind to cytochrome c oxidase at a ratio of one heme c per heme aa3. The association constants are similar to that of native cytochrome c except for (N epsilon-isopropyl)19 and (N epsilon,N epsilon-dimethyl)19 cytochromes c, which bind respectively four times and six times less strongly. The derivatives are good substrates for the cytochrome c oxidase reaction. The spectral changes accompanying the binding of the modified cytochromes c to cytochrome c oxidase are quite different from the spectral changes observed with native cytochrome c. The different optical absorption and MCD changes are explained by a polarity change around the exposed heme edge in the cytochrome c-cytochrome c oxidase complex. The CD changes indicate a conformational rearrangement restricted to the surface area surrounding the exposed heme edge. The rearrangement may involve a movement of the evolutionarily conserved Phe82 out of the vicinity of the heme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
One of the nuclear-coded subunits of yeast cytochrome c oxidase is specified by a gene family composed of two genes, COX5a and COX5b. These genes are regulated differentially by oxygen and encode isoforms of subunit V, designated Va and Vb, which have only 66% primary sequence identity. Yeast cells require one or the other isoform for a functional cytochrome c oxidase (Trueblood, C. E., and Poyton, R. O. (1987) Mol. Cell Biol. 7, 3520-3526). To determine if these isoforms of subunit V alter the catalytic properties of holocytochrome c oxidase, we have analyzed various aspects of cytochrome c oxidase function in intact yeast cells that produce only one type of isoform. From measurements of room temperature turnover numbers and low temperature rates of ligand binding, single turnover cytochrome c oxidation, and internal electron transfer (heme a oxidation), we have found that isozymes which incorporate the Vb isoform have both higher turnover rates and higher rates of heme a oxidation than isozymes which incorporate Va. These findings support the conclusion that the isoforms of subunit V modulate cytochrome c oxidase activity in vivo and suggest that they do so by altering the rates of one or more intramolecular electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

19.
Second derivative absorption spectroscopy has been used to assess the effects of complex formation between cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase on the conformation of the cytochrome a cofactor. When ferrocytochrome c is complexed to the cyanide-inhibited reduced or mixed valence enzyme, the conformation of ferrocytochrome a is affected. The second derivative spectrum of these enzyme forms displays two electronic transitions at 443 and 451 nm before complex formation, but only the 443-nm transition after cytochrome c is bound. This effect is not induced by poly-L-lysine, a homopolypeptide which is known to bind to the cytochrome c binding domain of cytochrome c oxidase. The effect is limited to cyanide-inhibited forms of the enzyme; no effect was observed for the fully reduced unliganded or fully reduced carbon monoxide-inhibited enzyme. The spectral signatures of these changes and the fact that they are exclusively associated with the cyanide-inhibited enzyme are both reminiscent of the effects of low pH on the conformation of cytochrome a (Ishibe, N., Lynch, S., and Copeland, R. A. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 23916-23920). These results are discussed in terms of possible mechanisms of communication between the cytochrome c binding site, cytochrome a, and the oxygen binding site within the cytochrome c oxidase molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Cytochrome c peroxidase forms an electron transfer complex with cytochrome c. The complex is governed by ionic bonds between side chain amino groups of cytochrome c and carboxyl groups of peroxidase. To localize the binding site for cytochrome c on the peroxidase, we have used the method of differential chemical modification. By this method the chemical reactivity of carboxyl groups (toward carbodiimide/aminoethane sulfonate) was compared in free and in complexed peroxidase. When ferricytochrome c was bound to cytochrome c peroxidase, acidic residues 33, 34, 35, 37, 221, 224, and 1 to 3 carboxyls at the C terminus became less reactive by a factor of approximately 4, relative to the remaining 39 carboxylates of peroxidase. Of the less reactive residues those in the 30-40 region and the 221/224 pair are on opposite sides of the surface area which contains the heme propionates. We, therefore, propose that the binding site for cytochrome c on cytochrome c peroxidase spans the area where one heme edge comes close to the molecular surface. The results are in very good agreement with chemical cross-linking studies (Waldmeyer, B., and Bosshard, H.R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 5184-5190); they also support a hypothetical model predicted on the basis of the known crystal structures of cytochrome c and peroxidase (Poulos, T.L., and Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10322-10330).  相似文献   

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