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1.
A novel cytochrome ba complex was isolated from aerobically grown cells of the thermoacidophilic archaeon Acidianus ambivalens. The complex was purified with two subunits, which are encoded by the cbsA and soxN genes. These genes are part of the pentacistronic cbsAB-soxLN-odsN locus. The spectroscopic characterization revealed the presence of three low-spin hemes, two of the b and one of the a(s)-type with reduction potentials of +200, +400 and +160 mV, respectively. The SoxN protein is proposed to harbor the heme b of lower reduction potential and the heme a(s), and CbsA the other heme b. The soxL gene encodes a Rieske protein, which was expressed in E. coli; its reduction potential was determined to be +320 mV. Topology predictions showed that SoxN, CbsB and CbsA should contain 12, 9 and one transmembrane alpha-helices, respectively, with SoxN having a predicted fold very similar to those of the cytochromes b in bc(1) complexes. The presence of two quinol binding motifs was also predicted in SoxN. Based on these findings, we propose that the A. ambivalens cytochrome ba complex is analogous to the bc(1) complexes of bacteria and mitochondria, however with distinct subunits and heme types.  相似文献   

2.
The Rieske iron-sulfur center consists of a [2Fe-2S] cluster liganded to a protein via two histidine and two cysteine residues present in conserved sequences called Rieske motifs. Two protein families possessing Rieske centers have been defined. The Rieske proteins occur as subunits in the cytochrome bc1 and cytochrome b6f complexes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes or form components of archaeal electron transport systems. The Rieske-type proteins encompass a group of bacterial oxygenases and ferredoxins. Recent studies have uncovered several new proteins containing Rieske centers, including archaeal Rieske proteins, bacterial oxygenases, bacterial ferredoxins, and, intriguingly, eukaryotic Rieske oxygenases. Since all these proteins contain a Rieske motif, they probably form a superfamily with one common ancestor. Phylogenetic analyses have, however, been generally limited to similar sequences, providing little information about relationships within the whole group of these proteins. The aim of this work is, therefore, to construct a dendrogram including representatives from all Rieske and Rieske-type protein classes in order to gain insight into their evolutionary relationships and to further define the phylogenetic niches occupied by the recently discovered proteins mentioned above.  相似文献   

3.
The first crystal structure of an archaeal Rieske iron-sulfur protein, the soluble domain of Rieske iron-sulfur protein II (soxF) from the hyperthermo-acidophile Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, has been solved by multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) and has been refined to 1.1 A resolution. SoxF is a subunit of the terminal oxidase supercomplex SoxM in the plasma membrane of S. acidocaldarius that combines features of a cytochrome bc(1) complex and a cytochrome c oxidase. The [2Fe-2S] cluster of soxF is most likely the primary electron acceptor during the oxidation of caldariella quinone by the cytochrome a(587)/Rieske subcomplex. The geometry of the [2Fe-2S] cluster and the structure of the cluster-binding site are almost identical in soxF and the Rieske proteins from eucaryal cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f complexes, suggesting a strict conservation of the catalytic mechanism. The main domain of soxF and part of the cluster-binding domain, though structurally related, show a significantly divergent structure with respect to topology, non-covalent interactions and surface charges. The divergent structure of soxF reflects a different topology of the soxM complex compared to eucaryal bc complexes and the adaptation of the protein to the extreme ambient conditions on the outer membrane surface of a hyperthermo-acidophilic organism.  相似文献   

4.
In this minireview an overview is presented of the kinetics of electron transfer within the cytochrome bc (1) complex, as well as from cytochrome bc (1) to cytochrome c. The cytochrome bc (1) complex (ubiquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) is an integral membrane protein found in the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as the electron transfer chains of many respiratory and photosynthetic bacteria. Experiments on both mitochondrial and bacterial cyatochrome bc (1) have provided detailed kinetic information supporting a Q-cycle mechanism for electron transfer within the complex. On the basis of X-ray crystallographic studies of cytochrome bc (1), it has been proposed that the Rieske iron-sulfur protein undergoes large conformational changes as it transports electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (1). A new method was developed to study electron transfer within cytochrome bc (1) using a binuclear ruthenium complex to rapidly photooxidize cytochrome c (1). The rate constant for electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center to cytochrome c (1) was found to be 80,000 s(-1), and is controlled by the dynamics of conformational changes in the iron-sulfur protein. Moreover, a linkage between the conformation of the ubiquinol binding site and the conformational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein has been discovered which could play a role in the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. A ruthenium photoexcitation method has also been developed to measure electron transfer from cytochrome c (1) to cytochrome c. The kinetics of electron transfer are interpreted in light of a new X-ray crystal structure for the complex between cytochrome bc (1) and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

5.
Many microbial genomes have been sequenced in the recent years. Multiple genes encoding Rieske iron-sulfur proteins, which are subunits of cytochrome bc-type complexes or oxygenases, have been detected in many pro- and eukaryotic genomes. The diversity of substrates, co-substrates and reactions offers obvious explanations for the diversity of the low potential Rieske proteins associated with oxygenases, but the physiological significance of the multiple genes encoding high potential Rieske proteins associated with the cytochrome bc-type complexes remains elusive. For some organisms, investigations into the function of the later group of genes have been initiated. Here, we summarize recent finding on the characteristics and physiological functions of multiple high potential Rieske proteins in prokaryotes. We suggest that the existence of multiple high potential Rieske proteins in prokaryotes could be one way of allowing an organism to adapt their electron transfer chains to changing environmental conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans exhibits a thermodynamically stable ubisemiquinone radical detectable by EPR spectroscopy. The radical is centered at g = 2.004, is sensitive to antimycin, and has a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +42 mV. These properties are very similar to those of the stable ubisemiquinone (Qi) previously characterized in the cytochrome bc1 complexes of mitochondria. The micro-environment of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex changes in parallel with the redox state of the ubiquinone pool. This change is manifested as shifts in the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal from 1.80, 1.89, and 2.02 to 1.76, 1.90, and 2.03, respectively, as ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol. The spectral shift is accompanied by a broadening of the signal and follows a two electron reduction curve, with a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +30 mV. A hydroxy analogue of ubiquinone, UHDBT, which inhibits respiration in the cytochrome bc1 complex, shifts the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal to 1.78, 1.89, and 2.03, respectively, and raises the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur cluster at pH 7.5 from +265 to +320 mV. These changes in the micro-environment of the Paracoccus Rieske iron-sulfur cluster are like those elicited in mitochondria. These results indicate that the cytochrome bc1 complex of P. denitrificans has a binding site for ubisemiquinone and that this site confers properties on the bound ubisemiquinone similar to those in mitochondria. In addition, the line shape of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster changes in response to the oxidation-reduction status of ubiquinone, and the midpoint of the iron-sulfur cluster increases in the presence of a hydroxyquinone analogue of ubiquinone. The latter results are also similar to those observed in the mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex. However, unlike the mitochondrial complexes, which contain eight to 11 polypeptides and are thought to contain distinct quinone binding proteins, the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex contains only three polypeptide subunits, cytochromes b, c1, and iron-sulfur protein. The ubisemiquinone binding site and the site at which ubiquinone and/or ubiquinol bind to affect the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in Paracoccus thus exist in the absence of any distinct quinone binding proteins and must be composed of domains contributed by the cytochromes and/or iron-sulfur protein.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome bc 1 complexes have been isolated from wild type Rhodopseudomonas viridis and Rhodospirillum rubrum and purified by affinity chromatography on cytochrome c-Sepharose 4B. Both complexes are largely free of bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoids and contain cytochromes b and c 1 in a 2:1 molar ratio. For the Rps. viridis complex, evidence has been obtained for two spectrally distinct b-cytochromes. The R. rubrum complex contains a Rieske iron-sulfur protein (present in approximately 1:1 molar ratio to cytochrome c 1) and catalyzes an antimycin A- and myxothiazol-sensitive electron transfer from duroquinol to equine cytochrome c or R. rubrum cytochrome c 2. Although an attempt to prepare a cytochrome bc 1 complex from the gliding green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus was not successful, membranes isolated from phototrophically grown Cfl. aurantiacus were shown to contain a Rieske iron-sulfur protein and protoheme (the prosthetic group of b-type cytochromes).Dedicated to Prof. L.N.M. Duysens on the occasion of his retirement.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
11.
Chromatophore membranes isolated from the bacteriochlorophyll b-containing, photosynthetic purple nonsulfur bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas viridis, have been shown to contain a Rieske iron-sulfur protein, a cytochrome similar to cytochrome c1, and also at least one b-type cytochrome. These observations suggest the presence of a previously undetected cytochrome bc1 complex in this bacterium.  相似文献   

12.
Two cDNA clones encoding bovine heart mitochondrial Rieske iron-sulfur protein were obtained by immunological screening of a bovine heart cDNA expression library in lambda gt11 with antiserum directed against Rieske iron-sulfur protein isolated from bovine heart mitochondrial ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase. The cDNA inserts were 1005 and 1100 base pairs with an open reading frame of 807 base pairs which encoded a 196-amino acid mature Rieske iron-sulfur protein and a 73-amino acid presequence. The amino acid sequence of Rieske iron-sulfur protein deduced from nucleotide sequencing is the same as that obtained from protein sequencing except at residues #73 and #191 which are Ser and Asp instead of Ala and Gly, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Mutation of a serine that forms a hydrogen bond to the iron-sulfur cluster of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein to a cysteine results in a respiratory-deficient yeast strain due to formation of iron-sulfur protein lacking the iron-sulfur cluster. The Rieske apoprotein lacking the iron-sulfur cluster is inserted into both monomers of the dimeric cytochrome bc(1) complex and processed to mature size, but the protein lacking iron-sulfur cluster is more susceptible to proteolysis. In addition, the protein environment of center P in one half of the dimer is affected by failure to insert the iron-sulfur cluster as indicated by the fact that only one molecule of myxothiazol can be bound to the cytochrome bc(1) dimer. Although the bc(1) complex lacking the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster cannot oxidize ubiquinol through center P, rates of reduction of cytochrome b by menaquinol through center N are normal. However, less cytochrome b is reduced through center N, and only one molecule of antimycin can be bound at center N in the bc(1) dimer lacking iron-sulfur cluster. These results indicate that failure to insert the [2Fe-2S] cluster impairs assembly of the Rieske protein into the bc(1) complex and that this interferes with proper assembly of both center P and center N in one half of the dimeric enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
E Davidson  T Ohnishi  M Tokito  F Daldal 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3351-3358
The ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (or bc1 complex) of Rhodobacter capsulatus consists of three subunits: cytochrome b, cytochrome c1, and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein, encoded by the fbcF, fbcB, and fbcC genes, respectively. In the preceding paper [Davidson, E., Ohnishi, T., Atta-Asafo-Adjei, E., & Daldal, F. (1992) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)], we have observed that the apoproteins for cytochromes b and c1 are fully present in the intracytoplasmic membrane of R. capsulatus mutants containing low amounts of, or no, Rieske apoprotein. Here we present evidence that the redox midpoint potentials of cytochromes b and c1, as well as their ability to bind antimycin and stabilize a semiquinone at the Qi site, are unaffected by the absence of the Rieske subunit. This is the first report describing a mutant containing a stable bc1 subcomplex with an intact Qi site in the chromatophore membranes, and provides further evidence that a functional quinone reduction site can be formed in the absence of a quinol oxidation (Qo) site. Additional mutants carrying fbc deletions expressing the remaining subunits of the cytochrome bc1 complex were constructed to investigate the relationship among these subunits for their stability in vivo. Western blot analysis of these mutants indicated that cytochromes b and c1 protect each other against degradation, suggesting that they form a two-protein subcomplex in the absence of the Rieske protein subunit.  相似文献   

15.
The completely sequenced genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803 contains three open reading frames, petC1, petC2, and petC3, encoding putative Rieske iron-sulfur proteins. After heterologous overexpression, all three gene products have been characterized and shown to be Rieske proteins as typified by sequence analysis and EPR spectroscopy. Two of the overproduced proteins contained already incorporated iron-sulfur clusters, whereas the third one formed unstable aggregates, in which the FeS cluster had to be reconstituted after refolding of the denatured protein. Although EPR spectroscopy showed typical FeS signals for all Rieske proteins, an unusual low midpoint potential was revealed for PetC3 by EPR redox titration. Detailed characterization of Synechocystis membranes indicated that all three Rieske proteins are expressed under physiological conditions. Both for PetC1 and PetC3 the association with the thylakoid membrane was shown, and both could be identified, although in different amounts, in the isolated cytochrome b(6)f complex. The considerably lower redox potential determined for PetC3 indicates heterogeneous cytochrome b(6)f complexes in Synechocystis and suggests still to be established alternative electron transport routes.  相似文献   

16.
Folding and assembly studies with alpha-helical membrane proteins are often hampered by the absence of high-level expression systems as well as by missing suitable in vitro refolding procedures. Experimental constraints and requirements for heterologous expression and in vitro assembly of cytochrome b6 have been examined and conditions for in vitro reconstitutions of the protein have been optimized. Cytochrome b6 can serve as an excellent model system for in vitro studies on the dynamic interplay of an apo-protein and heme cofactors during assembly of a transmembrane b-type cytochrome. In vitro assembled cytochrome b6 binds two hemes with different midpoint potentials and both ferri as well as ferro heme bind to the apo-cytochrome. However, the ferro cytochrome appears to be less stable than the ferri form.  相似文献   

17.
The pet operon, encoding the prosthetic group-containing subunits of the cytochrome bc 1 complex of the purple sulfur bacterium Chromatium vinosum, has been cloned and sequenced. The 5 to 3 order of the C. vinosum genes is: petA, encoding the Rieske iron-sulfur protein; petB, encoding cytochrome b; and petC, encoding cytochrome c1. Cytochrome b is the best conserved subunit of the C. vinosum complex, when compared to the corresponding proteins from four photosynthetic purple non-sulfur bacteria (70 to 74% identity). Identities for the C. vinosum Rieske protein and those from purple non-sulfur bacteria range from 60 to 64%. The C-terminal region of the C. vinosum Rieske protein is quite similar to those of purple non-sulfur bacteria, while the N-terminal region is more closely related to mitochondrial Rieske proteins of organisms such as Neurospora crassa. Cytochrome c1 is the least well-conserved protein of the C. vinosum cytochrome bc1 complex, with identities ranging from 49 to 51% when compared to the corresponding proteins from purple non-sulfur bacteria. A well-conserved negatively-charged region of the cytochromes c1 of the purple non-sulfur bacteria, thought to be involved in binding the electron acceptor for the complex, cytochrome c2, is absent in C. vinosum cytochrome c1. A positive Southern hybridization using a probe constructed from the Rhodobacter sphaeroides fbcQ gene, which codes for a fourth subunit of the cytochrome bc1 complex in that bacterium, suggests the presence of a homologous gene in C. vinosum.  相似文献   

18.
Eric Lam  Richard Malkin   《BBA》1982,682(3):378-386
Photoreactions of cytochrome b6 have been studied using resolved chloroplast electron-transfer complexes. In the presence of Photosystem (PS) II and the cytochrome b6-f complex, photoreduction of the cytochrome can be observed. No soluble components are required for this reaction. Cytochrome b6 photoreduction was found to be inhibited by quinone analogs, which inhibit at the Rieske iron-sulfur center of the cytochrome complex, by the addition of ascorbate and by depletion of the Rieske center and bound plastoquinone from the cytochrome complex. Photoreduction of cytochrome b6 can also be demonstrated in the presence of the cytochrome complex and PS I. This photoreduction requires plastocyanin and a low-potential electron donor, such as durohydroquinone. Cytochrome b6 photoreduction in the presence of PS I is inhibited by quinone analogs which interact with the Rieske iron-sulfur center. These results are discussed in terms of a Q-cycle mechanism in which plastosemiquinone serves as the reductant for cytochrome b6 via an oxidant-induced reductive pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Radioimmunoassay and quantitative immunoblot analysis have been developed for quantitation of the iron-sulfur protein of cytochrome bc1 complex in order to compare its content in isolated cytochrome bc1 complex with that in electron transport particles. The result by radioimmunoassay indicated that the content of the iron-sulfur protein/mol of cytochrome b is higher by approximately 30%, on the average, in electron transport particles than in cytochrome bc1 complex. This observation was supported by the data of immunoblot analysis. Since approximately 1/3 of cytochrome b in electron transport particles is not attributed to cytochrome bc1 complex, but to succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex (Davis, K.A., Hatefi, Y., Poff, K. L., and Butler, W. L. (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 325, 341-356), the ratio of the iron-sulfur protein detectable by radioimmunoassay in electron transport particles to that in cytochrome bc1 complex is calculated to be approximately 2 on the basis of the content of 2 mol of b-type heme/mol of the complex. Therefore, it appears that the mitochondrial inner membrane contains approximately two times as much of the immunoreactive iron-sulfur protein as what is expected from the stoichiometry of one iron-sulfur center and two b-type hemes for cytochrome bc1 complex. This finding affords an interesting aspect in the study of biogenesis of cytochrome bc1 complex.  相似文献   

20.
We have used site-directed mutagenesis of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rieske iron-sulfur protein gene (RIP 1) to convert cysteines 159, 164, 178, and 180 to serines, and to convert histidines 161 and 181 to arginines. These 4 cysteines and 2 histidines are conserved in all Rieske proteins sequenced to date, and 4 of these 6 residues are thought to ligate the iron-sulfur cluster to the apoprotein. We have also converted histidine 184 to arginine. This histidine is conserved only in respiring organisms. The site-directed mutations of the six fully conserved putative iron-sulfur cluster ligands result in an inactive iron-sulfur protein, lacking iron-sulfur cluster, and failure of the yeast to grow on nonfermentable carbon sources. In contrast, when histidine 184 is replaced by arginine, the iron-sulfur cluster is assembled properly and the yeast grow on nonfermentable carbon sources. The site-directed mutations of the 6 fully conserved residues do not prevent post-translational import of iron-sulfur protein precursor into mitochondria, nor do the mutations prevent processing of iron-sulfur protein precursor to mature size protein by mitochondrial proteases. Optical spectra of mitochondria from the six mutants indicate that cytochrome b is normal, in contrast to the deranged spectrum of cytochrome b which results when the iron-sulfur protein gene is deleted. In addition, mature size iron-sulfur apoprotein is associated with cytochrome bc1 complex purified from a site-directed mutant in which iron-sulfur cluster is not inserted. These results indicate that mature size iron-sulfur apoprotein, lacking iron-sulfur cluster, is inserted into the cytochrome bc1 complex, where it interacts with and preserves the optical properties of cytochrome b. Insertion of the iron-sulfur cluster is not an obligatory prerequisite to processing of the protein to its final size. Either the processing protease cannot distinguish between iron-sulfur protein with or without the iron-sulfur cluster, or insertion of the iron-sulfur cluster occurs after the protein is processed to its mature size, possibly after it is assembled in the cytochrome bc1 complex.  相似文献   

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