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1.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were recorded of whole filaments of the cyanobacteria Nostoc muscorum and Anabaena cylindrica. Signals due to manganese were removed by freezing and thawing the cells in EDTA. EPR spectra were assigned on the basis of their g values, linewidths, temperature dependence and response to dithionite and light treatments. The principal components identified were: (i) rhombic Fe3+ (signal at g = 4.3), probably a soluble storage form of iron; (ii) iron-sulfur centers A and B of Photosystem I; (iii) the photochemical electron acceptor ‘X’ of Photosystem I; this component was also observed for the first time in isolated heterocysts; (iv) soluble ferredoxin which was present at a concentration of 1 molecule per 140 ± 20 chlorophyll molecules; (v) a membrane-bound iron-sulfur protein (g = 1.92). A signal g = 6 in the oxidized state was probably due to an unidentified heme compound. During deprivation of iron the rhombic Fe3+, centers A, B and X of Photosystem I, and soluble ferredoxin were all observed to decrease.  相似文献   

2.
In an earlier investigation (Shanmugam, K. T., Buchanan, B. B., and Arnon, D. I. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 256, 477-486) the extraction of ferredoxin from Rhodospirillum rubrum cells with the aid of a detergent (Triton X-100) and acetone revealed the existence of two types of ferredoxin (I and II) and led to the conclusion that both are membrane-bound. In the present investigation, ferredoxin and acid-labile sulfur analyses of photosynthetic membranes (chromatophores) and soluble protein extracts of the photosynthetic bacteria R. rubrum and Rhodopseudomonas spheroides showed that ferredoxins I and II are primarily components of the soluble protein fraction. After their removal, washed R. rubrum chromatophores were found to contain a considerable amount of tightly bound iron-sulfur protein(s), as evidenced by acid-labile sulfur and electron paramagnetic resonance analyses. Thus, like all other photosynthetic cells examined to date, R. rubrum cells contain both soluble ferredoxins and iron-sulfur proteins tightly bound to photosynthetic membranes. The molecular weights of ferredoxins I and II from photosynthetically grown R. rubrum cells were found to be 8,800 and 14,500, respectively. Using these molecular weights, the molar extinction coefficients at 390 nm for ferredoxins I and II were determined to be 30.3 and 17.2 mM-1 CM-1, respectively. Ferredoxin I contains 8 non-heme iron and 8 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule; ferredoxin II contains 4 non-heme iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Ferredoxin I was found only in photosynthetically grown cells whereas ferredoxin II was present in both light- and dark-grown cells. Ferredoxin II from both light- and dark-grown cells has the same molecular weight (14,500) and absorption spectrum and has 4 iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Low temperature electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of oxidized and photoreduced ferredoxins I and II from R. rubrum were recorded. The EPR spectrum of oxidized ferredoxin II exhibited a single resonance line at g = 2.012. Oxidized ferredoxin I, however, exhibited a spectrum that may arise from the superimposition of two resonance lines near g = 2.012. Photoreduced ferredoxin II displayed a rhombic EPR spectrum with a g value of 1.94. Photoreduced ferredoxin I exhibited a similar EPR spectrum at a temperature of 16 K, but when the temperature was lowered to 4.5 K the spectrum of ferredoxin I changed. This temperature-dependent spectrum may result from a weak spin-spin interaction between two iron-sulfur clusters. These results are consistent with the conclusion that R. rubrum ferredoxins I and II are, respectively, 8 iron/8 sulfur and 4 iron/4sulfur proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Type I reaction centers (RCs) are multisubunit chlorophyll-protein complexes that function in photosynthetic organisms to convert photons to Gibbs free energy. The unique feature of Type I RCs is the presence of iron-sulfur clusters as electron transfer cofactors. Photosystem I (PS I) of oxygenic phototrophs is the best-studied Type I RC. It is comprised of an interpolypeptide [4Fe-4S] cluster, F(X), that bridges the PsaA and PsaB subunits, and two terminal [4Fe-4S] clusters, F(A) and F(B), that are bound to the PsaC subunit. In this review, we provide an update on the structure and function of the bound iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs. The first new development in this area is the identification of F(A) as the cluster proximal to F(X) and the resolution of the electron transfer sequence as F(X)-->F(A)-->F(B)-->soluble ferredoxin. The second new development is the determination of the three-dimensional NMR solution structure of unbound PsaC and localization of the equal- and mixed-valence pairs in F(A)(-) and F(B)(-). We provide a survey of the EPR properties and spectra of the iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs of cyanobacteria, green sulfur bacteria, and heliobacteria, and we summarize new information about the kinetics of back-reactions involving the iron-sulfur clusters.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC No. 27774) grown in unenriched and in enriched 61Ni and 57Fe media has been purified to apparent homogeneity. Two fractions of enzymes with hydrogenase activity were separated and were termed hydrogenase I and hydrogenase II. they were shown to have similar molecular weights (77,600 for hydrogenase I and 75,500 for hydrogenase II), to be composed of two polypeptide chains, and to contain Ni and non-heme iron. Because of its higher specific activity (152 versus 97) hydrogenase II was selected for EPR and M?ssbauer studies. As isolated, hydrogenase II exhibits an "isotropic" EPR signal at g = 2.02 and a rhombic EPR signal at g = 2.3, 2.2, and 2.0. Isotopic substitution of 61Ni proves that the rhombic signal is due to Ni. Combining the M?ssbauer and EPR data, the isotropic g = 2.02 EPR signal was shown to originate from a 3Fe cluster which may have oxygenous or nitrogenous ligands. In addition, the M?ssbauer data also revealed two [4Fe-4S]2+ clusters iun each molecule of hydrogenase II. The EPR and M?ssbauer data of hydrogenase I were found to be identical to those of hydrogenase II, indicating that both enzymes have common metallic centers.  相似文献   

5.
Photosystem I particles from spinach were reduced by illumination at 77 K. Under these conditions the one-electrom transfer from P-700 resulted in a reduction of only one acceptor molecule of the reaction centre. The EPR signals at g=2.05, 1.94 and 1.86 were attributed to reduced centre A and the smaller signals at g=2.07, 1.92 and 1.89 to reduced centre B. Reduction of both centres by dithionite in the dark lead to signals at g=2.05, 1.99, 1.96, 1.94, 1.92 and 1.89. Thus, the features at g=2.07 and 1.86 disappeared and new signals at g=1.99 and 1.96 were observed. From the spectral changes it followed that the iron-sulphur centres A and B interact magnetically. Temperature dependent EPR spectra demonstrated a faster electron spin relaxation of centre A than of centre B. These conclusions were corroborated using microwave power saturation of the respective EPR signals. The saturation data of the fully reduced centres A and B could not be fitted using the saturation equation for a one-electron spin system. The magnetic interaction between the (4Fe-4S) CENTRes of the electron acceptors A and B resulted in saturation properties which are simular to those of the 2(4Fe-4S) ferredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum. For centre X a high proportion of homogeneous broadening of the EPR lines was inferred from the inhomogeneity parameter (b=1.83). It was, therefore, concluded that centre X is most probably an anion radical of chlorophyll. From the low temperature necessary for observing the EPR signal of centre X followed that the drastic relaxation enhancement has to be attributed to a magnetic interaction of the anion radical with iron.  相似文献   

6.
In order to utilize sulfate as the terminal electron acceptor, sulfate-reducing bacteria are equipped with a complex enzymatic system in which adenylylsulfate (AdoPSO4) reductase plays one of the major roles, reducing AdoPSO4 (the activated form of sulfate) to sulfite, with release of AMP. The enzyme has been purified to homogeneity from the anaerobic sulfate reducer Desulfovibrio gigas. The protein is composed of two non-identical subunits (70 kDa and 23 kDa) and is isolated in a multimeric form (approximately 400 kDa). It is an iron-sulfur, flavin-containing protein, with one FAD moiety, eight iron atoms and a minimum molecular mass of 93 kDa. Low-temperature EPR studies were performed to characterize its redox centers. In the native state, the enzyme showed an almost isotropic signal centered at g = 2.02 and only detectable below 20 K. This signal represented a minor species (0.10-0.25 spins/mol) and showed line broadening in the enzyme isolated from 57Fe-grown cells. Addition of sulfite had a minor effect on the EPR spectrum, but caused a major decrease in the visible region of the optical spectrum (around 392 nm). Further addition of AMP induced only a minor change in the visible spectrum whereas major changes were seen in the EPR spectrum; the appearance of a rhombic signal at g values 2.096, 1.940 and 1.890 (reduced Fe-S center I) observable below 30 K and a concomitant decrease in intensity of the g = 2.02 signal were detected. Effects of chemical reductants (ascorbate, H2/hydrogenase-reduced methyl viologen and dithionite) were also studied. A short time reduction with dithionite (15 s) or reduction with methyl viologen gave rise to the full reduction of center I (with slightly modified g values at 2.079, 1.939 and 1.897), and the complete disappearance of the g = 2.02 signal. Further reduction with dithionite produces a very complex EPR spectrum of a spin-spin-coupled nature (observable below 20 K), indicating the presence of at least two iron-sulfur centers, (centers I and II). M?ssbauer studies on 57Fe-enriched D. gigas AdoPSO4 reductase demonstrated unambiguously the presence of two 4Fe clusters. Center II has a redox potential less than or equal to 400 mV and exhibits spectroscopic properties that are characteristic of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster. Center I exhibits spectra with atypical M?ssbauer parameters in its reduced state and has a midpoint potential around 0 mV, which is distinct from that of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster, suggesting a different structure and/or a distinct cluster-ligand environment.  相似文献   

7.
Cultures of the blue-green alga, Aphanocapsa, were grown under iron-limiting conditions and changes in concentration of redox components of the photosynthetic electron transport chain, particularly iron-sulfur centers, were monitored by spectroscopic methods. A moderate iron depletion (1/10 of the normal concentration) had little effect on photosynthetic electron transport reactions and growth. Nevertheless, the amount of membrane-bound non-heme iron decreased sharply, and ferredoxin was nearly totally replaced by a flavin-containing protein, flavodoxin. Severe iron-deficiency (1/100 of the normal concentration) was accompanied by growth inhibition and decreased rates of photosynthetic electron flow. The Photosystem I reaction center was most affected by iron depletion as evidenced by a decrease in the amounts of iron-sulfur centers A, B, and X. However, formation of other redox proteins, even those that do not contain iron, was also inhibited by severe iron deficiency.  相似文献   

8.
Photooxidation of P700 at low temperatures in membrane fractions from the blue-green alga Chlorogloea fritschii may be coupled irreversibly to the reduction of a bound ferredoxin. If this ferredoxin is reduced before freezing, P700 photooxidation at low temperatures becomes reversible. This reversible photooxidation is coupled to the reduction of a component with an EPR signal at g = 2.08, 1.88 and 1.78. A complete spectrum of this component has been obtained for the first time. We propose that as in higher plants this component is the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem I, the bound ferredoxin is a secondary electron acceptor. Using 57Fe enriched preparations we have shown that the ERP signals attributed to the bound ferredoxin are due to iron containing centres. This experiment did not show the presence of iron in the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

9.
1. In respiratory nitrate reductase I of Klebsiella aerogenes, 0.24 atom of molybdenum, eight iron-sulfur groups and four tightly bound, non-heme iron atoms per molecule of enzyme (Mr 260 000) are found. 2. EPR spectra at 83 degrees K of oxidized and reduced nitrate reductase I show complex lines at g = 2.02 and g = 1.98, which are more intense in the reduced than in the oxidized enzyme. The resonances, the shape and intensity of which are rather temperature insensitive, are attributed to two species of paramagnetic molybdenum. In dithionite-reduced enzyme all these lines are saturated at the same microwave power of 15 mW. This is not the case in oxidized enzyme, where the resonance at g = 2.02 is hard to saturate. Addition of nitrate to dithionite-reduced reductase I decreases the intensity of the EPR lines to about that of oxidized enzyme. The participation of molybdenum in the electron transfer process has been discussed. 3. At 18 degrees K the oxidized enzyme exhibits an axial-symmetrical signal with g parallel = 2.10 and g = 2.03, and a signal with unknown symmetry at g = 2.015. Upon reduction by dithionite, a ferredoxin type of signal is observed with g values at 2.05, 1.95 and 1.88, while the g = 2.015 signal disappears. Reoxidation by nitrate causes a concomitant disappearance of the ferredoxin type of signal and reappearance of the g = 2.015 signal; hence iron-sulfur centres participate in the transfer of electrons to nitrate. 4. Nitrate reductase II, containing only two (Mr 117 000 and 57 000) of the three subunits found in nitrate reductase I and lacking the tightly bound iron, does not exhibit the axial-symmetrical signal (g = 2.10 and 2.03). Thus, it suggested that this signal in nitrate reductase I stems from an iron centre in the low-molecular weight subunit (Mr 52 000). 5. Inhibition studies confirm the participation of metals in the transfer of electrons from reduced benzylviologen to nitrate and show that the binding sites for these substrates are different.  相似文献   

10.
Heinnickel M  Shen G  Golbeck JH 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2530-2536
The Type I homodimeric photosynthetic reaction center found in anaerobic gram-positive bacteria of the genus Heliobacteriaceae incorporates FA- and FB-like iron-sulfur clusters similar to those found in Photosystem I as terminal electron acceptors. We recently isolated the PshB protein that harbors the iron-sulfur clusters from the reaction centers of Heliobacterium modesticaldum. Here, we report the cloning of a candidate gene and the properties of its product. Genuine PshB was dissociated from the reaction center with 1 M NaCl and purified using an affinity strategy. After acquiring its N-terminal amino acid sequence, an fd2-like gene encoding a 5.5-kDa dicluster ferredoxin was identified as a candidate for PshB. The Fd2-like apoprotein was expressed in Escherichia coli with a His tag, and the Fe/S clusters were inserted using inorganic reagents. The optical absorbance and EPR spectra of the Fd2-like holoprotein were similar to those of genuine PshB. The Fd2-like holoprotein was coeluted with P798-FX cores on both G-75 gel filtration and Ni affinity columns. Consistent with binding, the EPR resonances at g = 2.067, 1.933, and 1.890 from [FA/FB]- were restored after illumination at 15 K, and the long-lived, room-temperature charge recombination kinetics between P798+ and [FA/FB]- reappeared on a laser flash. These characteristics indicate that the long-sought gene and polypeptide harboring the FA- and FB-like clusters in heliobacteria have been identified. The amino acid sequence of PshB indicates an entirely different mode of binding with the reaction center core than PsaC, its counterpart in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

11.
A second ferredoxin protein was isolated from the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Clostridium thermoaceticum and termed ferredoxin II. This ferredoxin was found to contain 7.9 +/- 0.3 iron atoms and 7.4 +/- 0.4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per mol of protein. Extrusion studies of the iron-sulfur centers showed the presence of two [Fe4-S4] centers per mol of protein and accounted for all of the iron present. The absorption spectrum was characterized by maxima at 390 nm (epsilon 390 = 30,400 M-1cm-1) and 280 nm (epsilon 280 = 41.400 M-1 cm-1) and by a shoulder at 300 nm. The ration of the absorbance of the pure protein at 390 nm to the absorbance at 280 nm was 0.74. Electron paramagnetic resonance data showed a weak signal in the oxidized state, and the reduced ferredoxin exhibited a spectrum typical of [Fe4-S4] clusters. Double integration of the reduced spectra showed that two electrons were necessary for the complete reduction of ferredoxin II. Amino histidine, and 1 arginine, and a molecular weight of 6,748 for the native protein. The ferredoxin is stable under anaerobic conditions for 60 min at 70 degrees C. The average oxidation-reduction potential for the two [Fe4-S4] centers was measured as -365 mV.  相似文献   

12.
Richard Malkin 《BBA》1984,764(1):63-69
Modification of chloroplast membranes with diazonium benzene sulfonate (DABS) leads to a loss of Photosystem I-dependent ferredoxin reduction but not methyl viologen reduction. EPR studies of DABS-modified membranes show no inhibition of P-700+ formation at cryogenic temperatures, but iron-sulfur Center A photoreduction is markedly inhibited. Iron-sulfur Center B photoreduction at physiological temperatures in DABS-modified membranes is also markedly inhibited and little Center B can be detected after dark chemical reduction. These results indicate DABS specifically modifies iron-sulfur Center B of the spinach chloroplast Photosystem I electron acceptor complex and that Center B is obligately required for the reduction of Center A at cryogenic temperatures. Possible electron transport pathways at physiological temperatures are also considered.  相似文献   

13.
The hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743) was purified from each of three different fractions: soluble periplasmic (wash), soluble cytoplasmic (cell disruption) and membrane-bound (detergent solubilization). Plasma-emission metal analysis detected in all three fractions the presence of iron plus nickel and selenium in equimolecular amounts. These hydrogenases were shown to be composed of two non-identical subunits and were distinct with respect to their spectroscopic properties. The EPR spectra of the native (as isolated) enzymes showed very weak isotropic signals centered around g approximately 2.0 when observed at low temperature (below 20 K). The periplasmic and membrane-bound enzymes also presented additional EPR signals, observable up to 77 K, with g greater than 2.0 and assigned to nickel(III). The periplasmic hydrogenase exhibited EPR features at 2.20, 2.06 and 2.0. The signals observed in the membrane-bound preparations could be decomposed into two sets with g at 2.34, 2.16 and approximately 2.0 (component I) and at 2.33, 2.24, and approximately 2.0 (component II). In the reduced state, after exposure to an H2 atmosphere, all the hydrogenase fractions gave identical EPR spectra. EPR studies, performed at different temperatures and microwave powers, and in samples partially and fully reduced (under hydrogen or dithionite), allowed the identification of two different iron-sulfur centers: center I (2.03, 1.89 and 1.86) detectable below 10 K, and center II (2.06, 1.95 and 1.88) which was easily saturated at low temperatures. Additional EPR signals due to transient nickel species were detected with g greater than 2.0, and a rhombic EPR signal at 77 K developed at g 2.20, 2.16 and 2.0. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the Ni-signal C (g at 2.19, 2.14 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized Desulfovibrio gigas hydrogenase (Teixeira et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 8942]. During the course of a redox titration at pH 7.6 using H2 gas as reductant, this signal attained a maximal intensity around -320 mV. Low-temperature studies of samples at redox states where this rhombic signal develops (10 K or lower) revealed the presence of a fast-relaxing complex EPR signal with g at 2.25, 2.22, 2.15, 2.12, 2.10 and broad components at higher field. The soluble hydrogenase fractions did not show a time-dependent activation but the membrane-bound form required such a step in order to express full activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Incubation of thylakoid membranes from spinach with low concentrations of mercuric chloride induces the loss of one of the iron-sulfur centers, FB, in Photosystem I (PS I) and inhibits the electron transfer from PS I to the soluble electron carrier, ferredoxin. Reconstitution of this damaged iron-sulfur center has been carried out by incubating treated thylakoid membranes with exogenous FeCl3 and Na2S in the presence of-mercaptoethanol under anaerobic conditions. Low temperature EPR measurements indicate that center FB is largely restored. Kinetic experiments show that the restored FB can be photoreduced from P700. However, these reconstituted thylakoid membranes are still incompetent in the photoreduction of ferredoxin and NADP+, even though ferredoxin binding to the modified membranes was not impaired, indicating additional changes in the structure of the PS I complex must have occurred.  相似文献   

15.
Alan J. Bearden  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1972,283(3):456-468
Quantitative electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary event associated with Photosystem I in chloroplasts have been carried out at 25 °K. After illumination of either whole chloroplasts or Photosystem I subchloroplast fragments (D-144) with 715-nm actinic light at 25 °K, equal spin concentrations of oxidized P700 and reduced bound iron-sulfur protein (bound ferredoxin) have been measured. Quantitative determination of the concentration of these two carriers by EPR spectroscopy after illumination at low temperature indicates that Photosystem I fragments are enriched in P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein as compared with unfractionated chloroplasts. These results indicate that P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein function as the donor-acceptor complex of chloroplast Photosystem I.  相似文献   

16.
The Photosystem I acceptor system of a subchloroplast particle from spinach was investigated by optical and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy following graduated inactivation of the bound iron-sulfur proteins by urea/ferricyanide solution. The chemical analysis of iron and sulfur and the ESR properties of centers A, B and X are consistent with the participation of three iron-sulfur centers in Photosystem I. A differential decrease in centers A, B and X is observed under conditions that induce S2? →S0 conversion in the bound iron-sulfur proteins. Center B is shown to be the most susceptible, while center ‘X’ is the least susceptible component to oxidative denaturation. Stepwise inactivation experiments suggest that electron transport in Photosystem I does not occur sequentially from X→B→A, since there is quantitative photoreduction of center A in the absence of center B. We propose that center A is directly reduced by X; thus, X may serve as a branch point for parallel electron flow through centers A and B.  相似文献   

17.
The magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the 4Fe clusters in the iron-sulphur proteins high-potential iron protein from Chromatium and the 8Fe ferredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum have been measured over the wavelength range 300-800 nm at temperatures between approx. 1.5 and 50 K and at magnetic fields up to 5 tesla. In both cases the proteins have been studied in the oxidized and reduced states. The reduced state of high-potential iron protein gives a temperature-independent MCD spectrum up to 20 K, confirming the diamagetism of this state at low temperature. The MCD spectrum of samples of oxidized ferredoxin invariably show the presence of a low concentration of a paramagnetic species, in agreement with the observation that the EPR spectrum always shows a signal at g = 2.01. The paramagnetic MCD spectrum runs across the whole of the wavelength range studied and therefore most probably originates from an iron-sulphur centre. The diamagnetic component of the MCD spectrum of oxidized ferredoxin is very similar to that of reduced high-potential iron protein. The low-temperature MCD spectra of oxidized high-potential iron protein and reduced ferredoxin reveal intense, temperature-dependent bands. The spectra are highly structured with that of high-potential iron protein showing a large number of electronic transitions across the visible region. The MCD spectra of the two different oxidation levels are quite distinctive and should provide a means of establishing the identity of these state of 4Fe clusters in more complex proteins. MCD magnetisation curves have been constructed from detailed studies of the field and temperature dependence of the MCD spectra of the two paramagnetic oxidation states. These plots can be satisfactorily fitted to the theoretically computed curves for an S = 1/2 ground state with the g factors experimentally determined by EPR spectroscopy. The low-temperature MCD spectra of the reduced 2Fe-2S ferredoxin from Spirulina maxima are also presented and MCD magnetisation curves plotted and fitted to the experimentally determined g factors.  相似文献   

18.
The coupling constants J between the iron atoms in ferredoxin type iron-sulfur proteins containing binuclear clusters were evaluated by two parallel methods. The temperature dependence of the EPR linewidths and integrated abosrption intensities are both related to the energy of the first excited state. The values of J obtained were: center S-1 in succinate dehydrogenase, 90 cm-1; Rieske's iron-sulfur center, 65 cm-1; adrenodoxin, 270 cm-1. The behavior of iron-sulfur center N-1a in NADH:UQ reductase was also examined; its similarity to that of center S-1 indicates that center N-1a is also a binuclear iron-sulfur center, with J = 90 cm-1. Greater rhombic distortion present in the EPR spectrum of a binuclear cluster was associated with smaller values of J.  相似文献   

19.
The soluble ferredoxin from Thermus thermophilus was examined by M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopies and by reductive titrations. These studies demonstrate the presence of one 3Fe center, responsible for the characteristic g = 2.02 EPR signal in the oxidized protein, and one [4Fe-4S] center which is responsible for the rhombic EPR spectrum of the fully reduced protein. These assignments should replace those made by Ohnishi et al. (Ohnishi, T., Blum, H., Sato, S., Nakazawa, K., Hon-nami, K., and Oshima, T. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 345-348) prior to the discovery of the 3Fe clusters. The amino acid composition was determined and is discussed with reference to recent structural studies of 7Fe ferredoxins.  相似文献   

20.
The optical electron paramagnetic resonance and M?ssbauer spectral properties of the two iron-sulfur centers present in milk xanthine oxidase have been reexamined. It is found in the case of the optical spectral change observed on reduction of the enzyme that the two centers contribute approximately equally, with a ratio of spectral contributions for Fe/S I and Fe/S II of 0.55:0.45. This conclusion is based both on the behavior of the spectral change at wavelengths where only the two iron-sulfur centers contribute to the spectral change (under experimental conditions minimizing the effect of flavin semiquinone) during reductive titrations and a comparison of the spectra of 1- and 2-electron reduced enzyme under different conditions. This very similar spectral weighting for the two centers applies throughout the visible region. In the case of the EPR spectra, it is found from computer simulation of the signals observed under nonsaturating conditions that iron-sulfur center II exhibits g values of 1.902, 1.991, and 2.110 and does not exhibit two g values above that for the free electron, as has been reported (Lowe, J., Lynden-Bell, R.M., and Bray, R. C. (1972) Biochem. J. 130, 239-249). The g values for iron-sulfur center I obtained from the simulations are 1.894, 1.932, and 2.022. Finally, M?ssbauer spectra of xanthine oxidase have been obtained, and it is found that while the two iron-sulfur centers are indistinguishable in the oxidized state, the ferrous iron in one of the reduced iron-sulfur centers exhibits an unusually large quadrupole coupling.  相似文献   

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