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1.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO) is a redox-driven proton pump in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and many aerobic bacteria. The results from several studies have shown that zinc ions interfere with both the uptake and release of protons, presumably by binding near the orifice of the proton entrance and exit pathways. To elucidate the effect of Zn2+ binding on individual electron and proton-transfer reactions, in this study, we have investigated the reaction of the fully reduced R. sphaeroides CytcO with O2, both with enzyme in detergent solution and reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles, and, with and without, Zn2+. The results show that addition of Zn2+ at concentrations of < or = 250 microM to the outside of the vesicles did not alter the transition rates between intermediates PR (P3)-->F3-->O4. However, proton pumping was impaired specifically during the P3-->F3, but not during the F3-->O4 transition at Zn2+ concentrations of < or = 25 microM. Furthermore, proton pumping during the P3-->F3 transition was typically impaired with the "as isolated" CytcO, which was found to contain Zn2+ ions at microM concentration. As has already been shown, Zn2+ was also found to obstruct proton uptake during the P3-->F3 transition, presumably by binding to a site near the orifice of the D-pathway. In this work we found a KI of approximately 1 microM for this binding site. In conclusion, the results show that Zn2+ ions bind on both sides of CytcO and that binding of Zn2+ at the proton output side selectively impairs proton release during the P3-->F3 transition.  相似文献   

2.
Proton translocation in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) proceeds sequentially in a four-stroke manner. Every electron donated by cytochrome c drives the enzyme from one of four relatively stable intermediates to another, and each of these transitions is coupled to proton translocation across the membrane, and to uptake of another proton for production of water in the catalytic site. Using cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans we have studied the kinetics of electron transfer and electric potential generation during several such transitions, two of which are reported here. The extent of electric potential generation during initial electron equilibration between CuA and heme a confirms that this reaction is not kinetically linked to vectorial proton transfer, whereas oxidation of heme a is kinetically coupled to the main proton translocation events during functioning of the proton pump. We find that the rates and amplitudes in multiphase heme a oxidation are different in the OH-->EH and PM-->F steps of the catalytic cycle, and that this is reflected in the kinetics of electric potential generation. We discuss this difference in terms of different driving forces and relate our results, and data from the literature, to proposed mechanisms of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

3.
Whittaker MM  Whittaker JW 《Biochemistry》2001,40(24):7140-7148
Galactose oxidase is a remarkable enzyme containing a metalloradical redox cofactor capable of oxidizing a variety of primary alcohols during enzyme turnover. Recent studies using 1-O-methyl alpha-D-galactopyranoside have revealed an unusually large kinetic isotope effect (KIE) for oxidation of the alpha-deuterated alcohol (kH/kD = 22), demonstrating that cleavage of the 6,6'-di[2H]hydroxymethylene C-H bond is fully rate-limiting for oxidation of the canonical substrate. This step is believed to involve hydrogen atom transfer to the tyrosyl phenoxyl in a radical redox mechanism for catalysis [Whittaker, M. M., Ballou, D. P., and Whittaker, J. W. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8426-8436]. In the work presented here, the enzyme's unusually broad substrate specificity has allowed us to extend these investigations to a homologous series of benzyl alcohol derivatives, in which remote (meta or para) substituents are used to systematically perturb the properties of the hydroxyl group undergoing oxidation. Quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) correlations over the steady state rate data reveal a shift in the character of the transition state for substrate oxidation over this series, reflected in a change in the magnitude of the observed KIE for these reactions. The observed KIE values have been shown to obey a log-linear correlation over the substituent parameter, Hammett sigma. For the relatively difficult to oxidize nitro derivative, the KIE is large (kH/kD = 12.3), implying rate-limiting C-H bond cleavage for the oxidation reaction. This contribution becomes less important for more easily oxidized substrates (e.g., methoxy derivatives) where a much smaller KIE is observed (kH/kD = 3.6). Conversely, the solvent deuterium KIE is vanishingly small for 4-nitrobenzyl alcohol, but becomes significant for the 4-methoxy derivative (kH2O/kD2O = 1.2). These experiments have allowed us to develop a reaction profile for substrate oxidation by galactose oxidase, consisting of three components (hydroxylic proton transfer, electron transfer, and hydrogen atom transfer) comprising a single-step proton-coupled electron transfer mechanism. Each component exhibits a distinct substituent and isotope sensitivity, allowing them to be identified kinetically. The proton transfer component is unique in being sensitive to the isotopic character of the solvent (H2O or D2O), while hydrogen atom transfer (C-H bond cleavage) is independent of solvent composition but is sensitive to substrate labeling. In contrast, electron transfer processes will in general be less sensitive to isotopic substitution. Our results support a mechanism in which initial proton abstraction from a coordinated substrate activates the alcohol toward inner sphere electron transfer to the Cu(II) metal center in an unfavorable redox equilibrium, forming an alkoxy radical which undergoes hydrogen atom abstraction by the tyrosine-cysteine phenoxyl free radical ligand to form the product aldehyde.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction of solvent water protons with the bound paramagnetic metal ions of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been examined. The observed proton relaxation rates of enzyme solutions had a negative temperature dependence, indicating a rapid exchange between solvent protons in the coordination sphere of the metal ions and bulk solvent. An analysis of the dependence of the proton relaxation rate on the observation frequency indicated that the correlation time, which modulates the interaction between solvent protons and the unpaired electrons on the metal ions, is due to the electron spin relaxation time of the heme irons of cytochrome c oxidase. This means that at least one of the hemes is exposed to solvent. The proton relaxation rate of the oxidized enzyme was found to be sensitive to changes in ionic strength and to changes in the spin states of the metal ions. Heme a3 was found to be relatively inaccessible to bulk solvent. Partial reduction of the enzyme caused a slight increase in the relaxation rate, which may be due to a change in the antiferromagnetic coupling between two of the bound paramagnetic centers. Further reduction resulted in a decreased relaxation rate, and the fully reduced enzyme was no longer sensitive to changes in ionic strength. The binding of cytochrome c to cytochrome c oxidase had little effect on the proton relaxation rates of oxidized cytochrome oxidase indicating that cytochrome c binding has little effect on solvent accessibility to the metal ion sites.  相似文献   

5.
The Cu+2 electron spin resonance spectrum of galactose oxidase (galactose:O2 oxidoreductase, E.C. 1.1.3.9) indicates that the metal is in a pseudo-square planar environment. The electron g values are: gzz = 2.273, gxx = 2.058 and gyy = 2.048. The copper nuclear hyperfine constants are (in Gauss): Azz = 176.5, Axx = 28.8 and Ayy = 30.1. This spectrum is unaltered in either intensity or g or A values under conditions which cause the inhibition of galactose oxidase by superoxide dismutase. No combination of substrates (galactose and O2) and oxidant traps (superoxide dismutase and catalase) results in the reduction of the cupric ion resonance. Thus, a Cu+1-enzyme does not appear to be a stable intermediate along this enzyme's reaction path.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
GO (galactose oxidase; E.C. 1.1.3.9) is a monomeric 68 kDa enzyme that contains a single copper ion and an amino acid-derived cofactor. The enzyme is produced by the filamentous fungus Fusarium graminearum as an extracellular enzyme. The enzyme has been extensively studied by structural, spectroscopic, kinetic and mutational approaches that have provided insight into the catalytic mechanism of this radical enzyme. One of the most intriguing features of the enzyme is the post-translational generation of an organic cofactor from active-site amino acid residues. Biogenesis of this cofactor involves the autocatalytic formation of a thioether bond between Cys-228 and Tyr-272, the latter being one of the copper ligands. Formation of this active-site feature is closely linked to the loss of an N-terminal 17 amino acid prosequence. When copper and oxygen are added to this pro-form of GO (pro GO), purified in copper-free conditions from the heterologous host Aspergillus nidulans, mature GO is formed by an autocatalytic process. Structural comparison of pro GO with mature GO reveals overall structural similarity, but with some regions showing significant local differences in main-chain position. Some side chains of the active-site residues differ significantly from their positions in the mature enzyme. These structural effects of the prosequence suggest that it may act as an intramolecular chaperone to provide an open active-site structure conducive to copper binding and chemistry associated with cofactor formation. The prosequence is not mandatory for processing, as a recombinant form of GO lacking this region and purified under copper-free conditions can also be processed in an autocatalytic copper- and oxygen-dependent manner.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX), the last enzyme of the respiratory chain of aerobic organisms, catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to water. It is a redox-linked proton pump, whose mechanism of proton pumping has been controversially discussed, and the coupling of proton and electron transfer is still not understood. Here, we investigated the kinetics of proton transfer reactions following the injection of a single electron into the fully oxidized enzyme and its transfer to the hemes using time-resolved absorption spectroscopy and pH indicator dyes. By comparison of proton uptake and release kinetics observed for solubilized COX and COX-containing liposomes, we conclude that the 1-μs electron injection into Cu(A), close to the positive membrane side (P-side) of the enzyme, already results in proton uptake from both the P-side and the N (negative)-side (1.5 H(+)/COX and 1 H(+)/COX, respectively). The subsequent 10-μs transfer of the electron to heme a is accompanied by the release of 1 proton from the P-side to the aqueous bulk phase, leaving ~0.5 H(+)/COX at this side to electrostatically compensate the charge of the electron. With ~200 μs, all but 0.4 H(+) at the N-side are released to the bulk phase, and the remaining proton is transferred toward the hemes to a so-called "pump site." Thus, this proton may already be taken up by the enzyme as early as during the first electron transfer to Cu(A). These results support the idea of a proton-collecting antenna, switched on by electron injection.  相似文献   

11.
Relationships have been derived which describe the pH dependence contributed to rate and equilibrium constants for an arbitrary enzymic reaction step by the ionization of an enzymic group or non-enzymic reactant when both protonation states of the ionizing species are assumed to participate in the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Steric factors involved in the action of glycosidases and galactose oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
α-(1→2)-L=-Fucosidase, β-D=-galactosidase and galactose oxidase are sterically hindered by certain types of branching in the oligosaccharide chains. 1) β-D=-Galactosidase will not cleave galactose when the penultimate sugar carries a sialic acid residue as in I. 2) Galactose Oxidase will not oxidize the galactose residue in trisaccharide I but will in II. Moreover, neither galactose nor N-acetylgalactosamine, glycosidically bound as in III, is susceptible to oxidation with galactose oxidase until the α-(1→2) linkage between them is cleaved by α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase. 3) α-(1→2)-L=-Fucosidase action is inhibited by α-(1→3)-N-acetylgalactosaminyl or galactosyl residue, as in III and IV. Removal of the terminal sugars makes the fucosyl residue susceptible to fucosidase action.
  相似文献   

13.
14.
Oxidation of glycolipids in liposomes by galactose oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Small unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing globo-series glycolipids were labeled by the galactose oxidase/NaB[3H]4 procedure. The major glycolipid of human red cells, globoside, was the best substrate for galactose oxidase both in vesicles and in tetrahydrofuran-containing buffer. The oxidation rates of membrane-bound ceramide trihexoside and Forssman glycolipid were one-fourth and one-tenth, respectively, of the oxidation rate of globoside. Membrane-bound ceramide dihexoside was not a substrate for galactose oxidase, although it was readily oxidized in tetrahydrofuran-containing buffer. Soluble sialoglycoproteins and membrane-incorporated glycophorin A stimulated the oxidation of globoside-containing vesicles, whereas membrane-bound GD1a ganglioside had no effect on globoside oxidation.  相似文献   

15.
Two dimensional homonuclear (1H-1H) chemical shift correlation, double resonance and nuclear Overhauser effect difference spectroscopy were used to determine spectral parameters of narasin acid in different solvents approximating the range of polarities encountered within a biological membrane. The observed chemical shift and coupling constant changes were consistent with a polarity mediated shift between two conformational states, with the major conformational adjustments occurring in two specific backbone regions of the molecule previously described as “hinges” (1,2). Evidence suggests that the conformational equilibrium is not only mediated by solvent polarity but may in part be determined by the intrinsic propensity of narasin to form inclusion complexes with H+.  相似文献   

16.
Treatment of galactose oxidase with catalytic amounts of horseradish peroxidase results in increases in both enzyme activity and Cu(II)-associated absorbance. This reaction requires O2 and is reversed upon removal of O2 or peroxidase. o,o-Dityrosine is detected in amino acid hydrolysates of peroxidase-treated galactose oxidase as a ninhydrin peak. Furthermore, even native enzyme contains this species as detected by fluorescence measurements. Peroxidase treatment increases the amount of dityrosine present. The dityrosine forms an intramolecular crosslink, the first such crosslink found in a nonstructural protein. The peroxidase-catalyzed formation of the dityrosine and putative precursor radical(s) is thought to involve a tyrosyl ligand to the Cu(II) in galactose oxidase. Such a radical may be involved in the activation observed.  相似文献   

17.
Galactose oxidase (EC 1.1.3.9) has been purified 140-fold by DEAE- and CM-cellulose chromatography from cultures of Polyporus circinatus. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 68,000 ± 3,000 as determined by sedimentation equilibrium, sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis, Sephadex G-150 chromatography, and osmometry. Galactose oxidase is a single-chain protein which does not self-associate. Charge isozymes of the enzyme are detected by ion-exchange chromatography and gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition determined herein is significantly different from that previously reported (Kelly-Falcoz, F., Greenberg, H., And Horecker, B. L. (1965) J. Biol. Chem.240, 2966–2970). The enzyme contains 1% by weight of neutral carbohydrate.Galactose oxidase contains 1 g-atom of copper per 70,000 g of protein. The metal does not contribute to the electrophoretic or isozymic properties of the protein. However, the sedimentation coefficients of the holo- and apoenzymes, 4.76S and 4.83S, respectively, do suggest that small differences in protein conformation accompany the removal of the copper from the holoenzyme.Attempted sulfhydryl group titration of galactose oxidase shows that the holoenzyme is resistant to denaturation. However, in β-mercaptoethanol-guanidine HCl 5 half-cystine residues are titrated in the apoenzyme. On a dry-weight basis, the E1cm1% value for galactose oxidase at 280 nm is 15.4. Galactose oxidase has an isoelectric point above pH 10 which is a probable source of some of its anomalous behavior in physical measurements and enzyme-activity determinations.  相似文献   

18.
The functional significance of the metal centres of cytochrome oxidase is deduced from the ways in which the centres are bound into its peptides. To this end use is made of structural knowledge of other metalloproteins for dioxygen binding, haemocyanin and haemoglobin, and for electron transfer, cytochromes b and azurin. The order and manner in which the motions of helical sections of the oxidase are linked to proton pumping are suggested and a comparison is made with other proton pumps, for example that of ATP synthetases.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of ethanol and tunicamycin on synthesis and secretion of galactose oxidase was studied in resting cells of Dactylium dendroides. Ethanol promoted an overall decrease in both intra- and extracellular enzyme levels to the same extent that it inhibited [14C]glucosamine incorporation into total protein. The carbohydrate content of the intracellular enzyme was also depressed (44%) with a simultaneous decrease in O-Ser linked oligosaccharides. The intracellular galactose oxidase obtained after exposure of mycelia to ethanol plus tunicamycin lost 86% of its carbohydrate moieties, whereas the extracellular form lost only 35%. In both cases, residual sugar moieties were not eliminated by mild alkaline treatment. These data suggest that ethanol affects O-glycosylation of galactose oxidase. O-Underglycosylation did not affect the S0.5 values for galactose but diminished the molar catalytic activity. The absence of O-Ser/Thr-linked saccharides turned the intracellular enzyme into a form more susceptible to proteolysis than that devoid of N-linked sugars (tunicamycin-treated). O-Underglycosylation had a significant effect on the renaturation-reactivation of the enzyme after denaturation with 2.4 M Gdn-HCl.  相似文献   

20.
Galactose oxidase is a metalloenzyme containing a single copper atom per molecule. The mechanism of action of galactose oxidase is studied in this paper by investigating substrate specificity and activation by peroxidase, and probing the copper site by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Line-shape simulation of ESR spectra are also reported and a comparison is made between observed and simulated spectra for galactose oxidase. A comparison is also reported for the enzyme from various commercial sources and enzyme isolated from a fungus in this laboratory. The results of this investigation suggest that the copper is in an environment of four in-plane nitrogens with axial symmetry.  相似文献   

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