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1.
Cytochrome c oxidase, the terminal enzyme in the electron transfer chain, catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water in a multiple step process by utilizing four electrons from cytochrome c. To study the reaction mechanism, the resonance Raman spectra of the intermediate states were measured during single turnover of the enzyme after catalytic initiation by photolysis of CO from the fully reduced CO-bound enzyme. By measuring the change in intensity of lines associated with heme a, the electron transfer steps were determined and found to be biphasic with apparent rate constants of approximately 40 x 10(3) s(-1) and approximately 1 x 10(3) s(-1). The time dependence for the oxidation of heme a and for the measured formation and decay of the oxy, the ferryl ("F"), and the hydroxy intermediates could be simulated by a simple reaction scheme. In this scheme, the presence of the "peroxy" ("P") intermediate does not build up a sufficient population to be detected because its decay rate is too fast in buffered H(2)O at neutral pH. A comparison of the change in the spin equilibrium with the formation of the hydroxy intermediate demonstrates that this intermediate is high spin. We also confirm the presence of an oxygen isotope-sensitive line at 355 cm(-1), detectable in the spectrum from 130 to 980 micros, coincident with the presence of the F intermediate.  相似文献   

2.
Two radicals have been detected previously by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopies in bovine cytochrome oxidase after reaction with hydrogen peroxide, but no correlation could be made with predicted levels of optically detectable intermediates (P(M), F and F(z.rad;)) that are formed. This work has been extended by optical quantitation of intermediates in the EPR/ENDOR sample tubes, and by comparison with an analysis of intermediates formed by reaction with carbon monoxide in the presence of oxygen. The narrow radical, attributed previously to a porphyrin cation, is detectable at low levels even in untreated oxidase and increases with hydrogen peroxide treatments generally. It is presumed to arise from a side-reaction unrelated to the catalytic intermediates. The broad radical, attributed previously to a tryptophan radical, is observed only in samples with a significant level of F(z.rad;) but when F(z.rad;) is generated with hydrogen peroxide, is always accompanied by the narrow radical. When P(M) is produced at high pH with CO/O(2), no EPR-detectable radicals are formed. Conversion of the CO/O(2)-generated P(M) into F(z.rad;) when pH is lowered is accompanied by the appearance of a broad radical whose ENDOR spectrum corresponds to a tryptophan cation. Quantitation of its EPR intensity indicates that it is around 3% of the level of F(z.rad;) determined optically. It is concluded that low pH causes a change of protonation pattern in P(M) which induces partial electron redistribution and tryptophan cation radical formation in F(z.rad;). These protonation changes may mimic a key step of the proton translocation process.  相似文献   

3.
《BBA》2023,1864(2):148933
Cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal complex of the respiratory chains in the mitochondria of nearly all eukaryotes. It catalyzes the reduction of molecular O2 to water using electrons from the respiratory chain, delivered via cytochrome c on the external surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane. The protons required for water formation are taken from the matrix side of the membrane, making catalysis vectorial. This vectorial feature is further enhanced by the fact that the redox catalysis is coupled to the translocation of protons from the inside to the outside of the inner mitochondrial membrane. We are dealing with a molecular machine that converts redox free energy into a protonmotive force (pmf). Here, we review the current extensive knowledge of the structural changes in the active heme?copper site that accompany catalysis, based on a large variety of time-resolved spectroscopic experiments, X-ray and cryoEM structures, and advanced computational chemistry.  相似文献   

4.
《BBA》2023,1864(2):148934
The catalytic cycle of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) couples the reduction of oxygen to the translocation of protons across the inner mitochondrial membrane and involves several intermediate states of the heme a3-CuB binuclear center with distinct absorbance properties. The absorbance maximum close to 605 nm observed during respiration is commonly assigned to the fully reduced species of hemes a or a3 (R). However, by analyzing the absorbance of isolated enzyme and mitochondria in the Soret (420–450 nm), alpha (560–630 nm) and red (630–700 nm) spectral regions, we demonstrate that the Peroxy (P) and Ferryl (F) intermediates of the binuclear center are observed during respiration, while the R form is only detectable under nearly anoxic conditions in which electrons also accumulate in the higher extinction coefficient low spin a heme. This implies that a large fraction of COX (>50 %) is active, in contrast with assumptions that assign spectral changes only to R and/or reduced heme a. The concentration dependence of the COX chromophores and reduced c-type cytochromes on the transmembrane potential (ΔΨm) was determined in isolated mitochondria during substrate or apyrase titration to hydrolyze ATP. The cytochrome c-type redox levels indicated that soluble cytochrome c is out of equilibrium with respect to both Complex III and COX. Thermodynamic analyses confirmed that reactions involving the chromophores we assign as the P and F species of COX are ΔΨm-dependent, out of equilibrium, and therefore much slower than the ΔΨm-insensitive oxidation of the R intermediate, which is undetectable due to rapid oxygen binding.  相似文献   

5.
Photodissociated cytochrome c oxidase: cryotrapped metastable intermediates   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
By freezing CO-bound cytochrome c oxidase at cryogenic temperatures, we have been able to cryotrap metastable intermediates of photodissociation. The differences in the resonance Raman spectrum between these intermediates and ligand-free reduced cytochrome oxidase at cryogenic temperatures are the same as those between the phototransient and the fully reduced preparation detected with 10-ns excitation at room temperature. The largest difference occurs in the iron-histidine stretching mode of cytochrome a3, which shifts by up to 8 cm-1 to higher frequency in the photoproduct. At 4 K the iron-histidine mode displays two unrelaxed frequencies in the photoproduct, which we attribute to two different unrelaxed structures of the heme pocket. The frequencies and intensities of the lines in the resonance Raman spectrum are sensitive to the incident laser power density in both the ligand-free fully reduced preparation and the photoproduct even at 4 K. At 77 K the carbonyl stretching mode of the formyl group in cytochrome a32+ is especially sensitive to laser power, displaying two frequencies-1666 cm-1 at low-flux density and 1674 cm-1 at high-flux density. These frequencies may reflect a change in conformation of the formyl group or a change in its interaction with the protein such as in hydrogen bonding to the carbonyl of the formyl group. The absence of immediate relaxation of the CO photoproduct must be considered when one studies the structure and kinetics of the O2 intermediates that are formed in triple trapping and flow-flash experiments following photodissociation of the CO-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Identification of the locations of protonatable sites in cytochrome c oxidase that are influenced by reactions in the binuclear centre is critical to assessment of proposed coupling mechanisms, and to controversies on where the pumping steps occur. One such protonation site is that which governs interconversion of the isoelectronic 607 nm 'P(M)' and 580 nm 'F' forms of the two-electron-reduced oxygen intermediate. Low pH favours protonation of a site that is close to an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-silent radical species in P(M), and this induces a partial electronic redistribution to form an EPR-detectable tryptophan radical in F. A further protonatable group that must be close to the binuclear centre has been detected in bacterial oxidases by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy from pH-dependent changes in the haem-bound CO vibration frequency at low temperatures. However, in bovine cytochrome c oxidase under similar conditions of measurement, haem-bound CO remains predominantly in a single 1963 cm(-1) form between pH 6.5 and 8.5, indicating that this group is not present. Lack of pH dependence extends to the protein region of the CO photolysis spectra and suggests that both the reduced and the reduced/CO states do not have titratable groups that affect the binuclear centre strongly in the pH range 6.5-8.5. This includes the conserved glutamic acid residue E242 whose pK appears to be above 8.5 even in the fully oxidised enzyme. The results are discussed in relation to recent ideas on coupling mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Rate constants of cyanide binding to 'fast' oxidase have been measured in the fully-oxidised (O), peroxy (P) and ferryl (F) states at pH 8.0. Values of 2.2, 8 and 10 M-1 s-1, respectively, were obtained. Thus, none of these states appears to exhibit a rate that would identify it as the species responsible for the extremely rapid cyanide binding observed during turnover. On the other hand, with 'oxidised' enzyme as prepared, containing a very small fraction of one-electron-reduced (E state) oxidase, a corresponding fraction of enzyme exhibited spectral changes consistent with cyanide binding with a rate constant in excess of 10(4) M-1 s-1. Evidence is presented suggesting that mediation of electron transfer from one-electron-reduced, cyanide-liganded enzyme to free, ferric oxidase, rather than a global protein conformational change of the enzyme, is responsible for the greatly enhanced cyanide binding rates seen in the presence of cytochrome c or poly(L-lysine). Inter-oxidase electron exchange in 'oxidised' enzyme can result in a complicated dependence of the binding rate on cyanide concentration. We have demonstrated that this may give rise to a saturation of the rate of cyanide binding.  相似文献   

8.
A novel technique was employed to collect resonance Raman spectra of an oxygenated intermediate of cytochrome c oxidase. Instead of laser pulses of high peak power, which may cause photodissociation, a continuous wave laser and a mixed flow apparatus were used. An intermediate formed within 450 microseconds after the reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with molecular oxygen could be detected. From the spectra it could be deduced that the most likely candidate for the intermediate would be a transient oxygenated species having the Fe2+ - O2 or Fe4+ = O heme in cytochrome a3 and the Fe2+ heme in cytochrome a.  相似文献   

9.
M Fabian  G Palmer 《Biochemistry》1999,38(19):6270-6275
The redox states of the "peroxy" (P) and "ferryl" (F) intermediates formed during reoxidation of reduced bovine cytochrome c oxidase have been probed by reduction with both ferrocytochrome c and acetylpyridine NADH under anaerobic conditions using optical spectroscopy. The reduction of the P and F forms revealed that both are in very similar redox states. One-electron reduction of either the P or F form yields an optical spectrum primarily due to oxidized enzyme implying that the heme iron of cytochrome a3 is in the ferryl state in both forms. The F and P forms were found to be 1 and less than 1.3 oxidizing equiv, respectively, above the oxidized enzyme. The slightly higher oxidation state in the P form is interpreted as being due to an optically undetectable redox center presumably located in the binuclear cavity.  相似文献   

10.
Molecular weight of two states of cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
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11.
Spectra of intermediates in oxidation and reduction of cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Two kinetic components with distinct difference spectra occur during reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by ruthenium hexamine. They are attributed to reduction of heme a (fast phase) and heme a3 (slow phase) (Scott, R. A., and Gray, H. B. (1980) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 102, 3219-3774). Two spectra seen during oxidation of cytochrome c oxidase by molecular oxygen have also been attributed to oxidation of hemes a3 and a (Greenwood, C., and Gibson, Q. H. (1967) J. Biol. Chem. 242, 1782-1787). We now report that spectra for the reductive and oxidative reactions obtained with the same preparations and the same apparatus under similar conditions are significantly different. The reactions appear to populate different reaction intermediates. Reconstitution into phospholipid vesicles does not affect these two spectra significantly. During turnover, the chief intermediates are those of the reductive pathway (Scott and Gray type intermediates). Reduction of heme a3 occurs approximately 70 times faster after turnover than the reduction of the resting enzyme. This is probably a dramatic "pulsing" effect (Wilson, M. T., Peterson, J., Antonini, E., Brunori, M., Colosimo, A., and Wyman, J. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 7115-7118).  相似文献   

12.
Two radicals have been detected previously by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopies in bovine cytochrome oxidase after reaction with hydrogen peroxide, but no correlation could be made with predicted levels of optically detectable intermediates (PM, F and F) that are formed. This work has been extended by optical quantitation of intermediates in the EPR/ENDOR sample tubes, and by comparison with an analysis of intermediates formed by reaction with carbon monoxide in the presence of oxygen. The narrow radical, attributed previously to a porphyrin cation, is detectable at low levels even in untreated oxidase and increases with hydrogen peroxide treatments generally. It is presumed to arise from a side-reaction unrelated to the catalytic intermediates. The broad radical, attributed previously to a tryptophan radical, is observed only in samples with a significant level of F but when F is generated with hydrogen peroxide, is always accompanied by the narrow radical. When PM is produced at high pH with CO/O2, no EPR-detectable radicals are formed. Conversion of the CO/O2-generated PM into F when pH is lowered is accompanied by the appearance of a broad radical whose ENDOR spectrum corresponds to a tryptophan cation. Quantitation of its EPR intensity indicates that it is around 3% of the level of F determined optically. It is concluded that low pH causes a change of protonation pattern in PM which induces partial electron redistribution and tryptophan cation radical formation in F. These protonation changes may mimic a key step of the proton translocation process.  相似文献   

13.
Cytochrome c derivatives labeled with a 3-nitrophenylazido group at lysine 13, at lysine 22, or at both residues have been prepared. The interaction of the cytochrome c derivatives with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase (ferrocytochrome c:oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.9.3.1) in the presence of ultrviolet light results in formation of a covalent complex between cytochrome c and the oxidase. Using the lysine 22 derivative, the polypeptide composition of the oxidase is not modified, nor is its catalytic activity, whereas with the lysine 13 derivative, the gel electrophoretic pattern is altered and the catalytic activity of the complex diminished. The data are consisten with a specfic covalent interaction of the lysine 13 derivative of cytochrome c with the polypeptide of molecular weight 23,700 (Subunit II) of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

14.
15.
1. The "oxygenated" form of cytochrome has been generated by treatment of the enzyme with ascorbic acid. 2. "Oxygenated oxidase" so generated is stable over long periods (24 h). 3. Sedimentation velocity experiments have shown the "oxygenated" oxidase to be a less compact molecule than the oxidized.  相似文献   

16.
Proton-pumping cytochrome c oxidase.   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
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17.
Eukaryotic cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. COX is a multimeric enzyme formed by subunits of dual genetic origin which assembly is intricate and highly regulated. The COX catalytic core is formed by three mitochondrial DNA encoded subunits, Cox1, Cox2 and Cox3, conserved in the bacterial enzyme. Their biogenesis requires the action of messenger-specific and subunit-specific factors which facilitate the synthesis, membrane insertion, maturation or assembly of the core subunits. The study of yeast strains and human cell lines from patients carrying mutations in structural subunits and COX assembly factors has been invaluable to identify these ancillary factors. Here we review the current state of knowledge of the biogenesis and assembly of the eukaryotic COX catalytic core and discuss the degree of conservation of the players and mechanisms operating from yeast to human. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Biogenesis/Assembly of Respiratory Enzyme Complexes.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c was chemically coupled to cytochrome c oxidase using the reagent 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (EDC) which couples amine groups to carboxyl residues. The products of this reaction were analyzed on 2.5–27% polyacrylamide gradient gels electrophoretically. Since cytochrome c binds to cytochrome oxidase electrostatically in an attraction between certain of its lysine residues and carboxyl residues on the oxidase surface, EDC is an especially appropriate reagent probe for binding-subunit studies. Coupling of polylysine to cytochrome oxidase using EDC was also performed, and the products of this reaction indicate that polylysine, an inhibitor of the cytochrome c reaction with oxidase, binds to the same oxidase subunit as does cytochrome c, subunit IV in the gel system used.  相似文献   

19.
1. By the application of the principle of the sequential fragmentation of the respiratory chain, a simple-method has been developed for the isolation of phospholipid-depleted and phospholipid-rich cytochrome oxidase preparations. 2. The phospholip-rich oxidase contains about 20% lipid, including mainly phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, and cardiolipin. Its enzymic activity is not stimulated by an external lipid such as asolectin. 3. The phospholipid-depleted oxidase contains less than 0.1% lipid. It is enzymically inactive in catalyzing the oxidation of reduced cytochrome c by molecular oxygen. This activity can be fully restored by asolectin; and partially restored (approximately 75%) by purified phospholipids individually or in combination. The activity can be partially restored also by phospholipid mixtures isolated from mitochondria, from the oxidase itself, and from related preparations. Among the detergents tested only Emasol-1130 and Tween 80 show some stimulatory activity. 4. The phospholipid-depleted oxidase binds with cytochrome c evidently by "protein-protein" interactions as does the phospholipid-rich or the phospholipid-replenished oxidase to form a complex with the ratio of cytochrome c to heme a of unity. The complex prepared from phospholipid-depleted cytochrome oxidase exhibits a characteristic Soret absorption maximum at 415 nm in the difference spectrum of the carbon monoxide-reacted reduced form minus the reduced form. This 415-nm maximum is abolished by the replenishment of the complex with a phospholipid or by the dissociation of the complex in cholate or in a medium of high ionic strength. When ascorbate is used as an electron donor, the complex prepared from phospholipid-depleted cytochrome oxidase does not cause the reduction of cytochrome a3 which is in dramatic contrast to the complex from the phospholipid-rich or the phospholipid-replenished oxidase. However, dithionite reduces cytochrome a3 in all of the preparations of the cytochrome c-cytochrome oxidase complex. These facts suggest that the action of phospholipid on the electron transfer in cytochrome oxidase may be at the step between cytochromes a and a3. This conclusion is substantiated by preliminary kinetic results that the electron transfer from cytochrome a to a3 is much slower in the phospholipid-depleted than in phospholipid-rich or phospholipid-replenished oxidase. On the basis of the cytochrome c content, the enzymic activity has been found to be about 10 times higher in the system with the complex (in the presence of the replenishedhe external medium unless energy is provided, and that  相似文献   

20.
Ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (Complex III), cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase can be combined to reconstitute antimycin-sensitive ubiquinol oxidase activity. In 25 mM-acetate/Tris, pH 7.8, cytochrome c binds at high-affinity sites (KD = 0.1 microM) and low-affinity sites (KD approx. 10 microM). Quinol oxidase activity is 50% of maximal activity when cytochrome c is bound to only 25% of the high affinity sites. The other 50% of activity seems to be due to cytochrome c bound at low-affinity sites. Reconstitution in the presence of soya-bean phospholipids prevents aggregation of cytochrome c oxidase and gives rise to much higher rates of quinol oxidase. The cytochrome c dependence was unaltered. Antimycin curves have the same shape regardless of lipid/protein ratio, Complex III/cytochrome c oxidase ratio or cytochrome c concentration. Proposals on the nature of the interaction between Complex III, cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase are considered in the light of these results.  相似文献   

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