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1.
Gupta S  Warne A  Saraste M  Mazumdar S 《Biochemistry》2001,40(20):6180-6189
The pH-induced conformational transition in the CuA domain of subunit II of cytochrome oxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans (PdII) has been investigated using various spectroscopic and stopped-flow kinetic methods. UV-visible absorption and circular dichroism studies showed that an increase in pH from 6 to 10 leads to a conformation change with pK(a) = 8.2 associated with the CuA site of the protein. The secondary structure of the protein was, however, shown to remain unchanged in these two conformational states. Thermal and urea-induced unfolding studies showed that the "low-pH" conformation is more stable compared to the "high-pH" conformation of the protein. Moreover, the overall stability of the protein was found to decrease on reduction of the metal centers in the low-pH form, while the oxidation state of the metal centers did not have any significant effect on the overall stability of the protein in the high-pH form. Stopped-flow pH-jump kinetic studies suggested that the conformational transition is associated with a slow deprotonation step followed by fast conformational equilibrium. The results are discussed in the light of understanding the pH-induced conformational change in the beta-barrel structure of the protein and its effect on the coordination geometry of the metal site.  相似文献   

2.
Electron-transfer reactions following flash photolysis of the mixed-valence cytochrome oxidase-CO complex have been measured at 445, 598 and 830 nm between pH 5.2 and 9.0 in the temperature range of 0-25 degrees C. There is a rapid electron transfer from the cytochrome a3-CuB pair to CuA (time constant: 14200 s-1), which is followed by a slower electron transfer to cytochrome a. Both the rate and the amplitude of the rapid phase are independent of pH, and the rate in the direction from CuA to cytochrome a3-CuB is practically independent of temperature. The second phase depends strongly on pH due to the titration of an acid-base group with pKa = 7.6. The equilibrium at pH 7.4 corresponds to reduction potentials of 225 and 345 mV for cytochrome a and a3, respectively, from which it is concluded that the enzyme is in a different conformation compared to the fully oxidized form. The results have been used to suggest a series of reaction steps in a cycle of the oxidase as a proton pump. Application of the electron-transfer theory to the temperature-dependence data suggests a mechanism for electron gating in the pump. Reduction of both cytochrome a and CuA leads to a conformational change, which changes the structure of cytochrome a3-CuB in such a way that the reorganizational barrier for electron transfer is removed and the driving force is increased.  相似文献   

3.
At alkaline pH, swine pepsinogen is reversibly inactivated in a transition which involves the cooperative release of two protons from the molecule and is governed by a pK = 9. Stopped flow kinetic studies on the absorbance changes accompanying this reaction show that it can be resolved into two steps, with increasing pH; a slow conformational change, whose amplitude follows the ionisation curve of one group of pK = 9.9, followed by a rapid pH dependent conformational change, linked to a group of pK = 8.2. The pH dependence of the rate of the slow step is interpreted to show the presence of a protonated group which cannot ionise in the neutral form of the zymogen, but is in slow equilibrium with a form where it titrates with a pK 6.8. At the same time, a histidine in the amino terminal region of the protein becomes reactive to diethyl pyrocarbonate, suggesting this to be the group which triggers the reaction.  相似文献   

4.
At alkaline pH, swine pepsinogen is reversibly inactivated in a transition which involves the cooperative release of two protons from the molecule and is governed by a pK = 9. Stopped flow kinetic studies on the absorbance changes accompanying this reaction show that it can be resolved into two steps, with increasing pH; a slow conformational change, whose amplitude follows the ionisation curve of one group of pK = 9.9, followed by a rapid pH dependent conformational change, linked to a group of pK = 8.2. The pH dependence of the rate of the slow step is interpreted to show the presence of a protonated group which cannot ionise in the neutral form of the zymogen, but is in slow equilibrium with a form where it titrates with a pK = 6.8. At the same time, a histidine in the amino terminal region of the protein becomes reactive to diethyl pyrocarbonate, suggesting this to be the group which triggers the reaction.  相似文献   

5.
The type I copper center of amicyanin was replaced with a binuclear CuA center. To create this model CuA protein, a portion of the amino acid sequence that contains three of the ligands to the native type I copper center of Paracoccus denitrificans amicyanin was replaced with the corresponding portion of sequence that provides five ligands for the CuA center of cytochrome c oxidase from P. denitrificans. UV-visible and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy confirm that the engineered protein as isolated possesses the mixed-valence Cu1.5Cu1.5 (purple) CuA center. Comparison of the spectroscopic properties of this CuA amicyanin with those of the CuA centers of other natural and engineered CuA proteins suggests that the spectroscopic features may be dictated more by the protein host than the sequence of the CuA loop. Novel reactions for a simple CuA model protein are also described. In contrast to other natural and engineered CuA proteins, the fully reduced CuA amicyanin may be reoxidized by molecular oxygen to the mixed-valence state. It is also shown that CuA amicyanin can serve as an electron donor and an electron acceptor for other redox proteins. The mixed-valence form accepts electrons from cytochromes c-551i and c-550 from P. denitrificans. The fully reduced form donates electrons to native and P94F amicyanin. The function as either an electron donor or acceptor is consistent with the measured redox potential of CuA amicyanin of +273 mV. These data indicate that this CuA amicyanin will be a particularly useful model protein for structure-function studies of reactivity and the electron transfer properties of the CuA redox center.  相似文献   

6.
The recombination kinetics of photo-dissociated oxyhemerythrin (Sipunculus nudus) have been investigated between 298 K and 90 K. Fast geminate recombinations compete with oxygen escape into the solvent, from which a subsequent slower bimolecular rebinding takes place. In phosphate buffer (pH 7.7) at 278 K, the fast and slow processes are exponential and have comparable amplitudes. Whereas the oxygen escape rate rapidly decreases upon increasing the viscosity, the inward rate from the solvent is found to be independent of viscosity, up to about 50 cP (50 mPa.s). The data suggest that a Brownian-motion-driven displacement of one or several side-chain residues is implied in oxygen escape from within the protein and also that hemerythrin undergoes a conformational change in the deoxy state. At higher viscosities and lower temperature only the geminate phase is observed and the kinetics progressively depart from an exponential. Below about 130 K, the kinetics resemble those reported in the literature for heme proteins. They are consistent with a temperature-independent non-equilibrium frozen distribution of conformational substates. However, between 190 K and 130 K, the profile of the kinetics is invariant on a log/log plot and the results simply differ by a translation along the log t axis. It is shown that this property is expected only for a temperature-dependent distribution of substates in a Boltzmann equilibrium. From room temperature, where rebinding is exponential, down to the 'freezing' temperature, the geminate recombinations display a variety of kinetic laws. It can be shown, however, that for a broad class of substate distributions, the initial slope of the kinetic plot follows an Arrhenius relationship. The activation energy is equal to that of the exponential rate constant measured at high temperature. This result establishes the conditions under which protein data obtained from low-temperature kinetics can be extrapolated to physiological temperature.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome-c oxidase is the terminal enzyme in the respiratory chains of mitochondria and many bacteria and catalyzes the formation of water by reduction of dioxygen. The first step in the cytochrome oxidase reaction is the bimolecular electron transfer from cytochrome c to the homobinuclear mixed-valence CuA center of subunit II. In Thermus thermophilus a soluble cytochrome c552 acts as the electron donor to ba3 cytochrome-c oxidase, an interaction believed to be mainly hydrophobic. In Paracoccus denitrificans, electrostatic interactions appear to play a major role in the electron transfer process from the membrane-spanning cytochrome c552. In the present study, soluble fragments of the CuA domains and their respective cytochrome c electron donors were analyzed by stopped-flow spectroscopy to further characterize the interaction modes. The forward and the reverse electron transfer reactions were studied as a function of ionic strength and temperature, in all cases yielding monoexponential time-dependent reaction profiles in either direction. From the apparent second-order rate constants, equilibrium constants were calculated, with values of 4.8 and of 0.19, for the T. thermophilus and P. denitrificans c552 and CuA couples, respectively. Ionic strength strongly affects the electron transfer reaction in P. denitrificans indicating that about five charges on the protein interfaces control the interaction, when analyzed according to the Br?nsted equation, whereas in the T. thermophilus only 0.5 charges are involved. Overall the results indicate that the soluble CuA domains are excellent models for the initial electron transfer processes in cytochrome-c oxidases.  相似文献   

8.
Although point mutations usually lead to minor localized changes in protein structure, replacement of conserved Pro-76 with Gly in iso-2-cytochrome c induces a major conformational change. The change in structure results from mutation-induced depression of the pK for transition to an alkaline conformation with altered heme ligation. To assess the importance of position 76 in stabilizing the native versus the alkaline structure, the equilibrium and kinetic properties of the pH-induced conformational change have been compared for normal and mutant iso-2-cytochrome c. The pKapp for the conformational change is reduced from 8.45 (normal iso-2) to 6.71 in the mutant protein (Gly-76 iso-2), suggesting that conservation of Pro-76 may be required to stabilize the native conformation at physiological pH. The kinetics of the conformational change for both the normal and mutant proteins are well-described by a single kinetic phase throughout most of the pH-induced transition zone. Over this pH range, a minimal mechanism proposed for horse cytochrome c [Davis, L. A., Schejter, A., & Hess, G. P. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 2624-2632] is consistent with the data for normal and mutant yeast iso-2-cytochromes c: NH KH----N + H+ kcf in equilibrium kcb A NH and N are native forms of cytochrome c with a 695-nm absorbance band, A is an alkaline form that lacks the 695-nm band, KH is a proton dissociation constant, and kcf and kcb are microscopic rate constants for the conformational change. The Gly-76 mutation increases kcf by almost 70-fold, but kcb and KH are unchanged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
R A Copeland  P A Smith  S I Chan 《Biochemistry》1988,27(10):3552-3555
When the low-potential metal centers of cytochrome c oxidase are reduced, the enzyme undergoes a conformational transition that shifts the fluorescence maximum of the emitting tryptophan residues from 329 to 345 nm. At pH 7.4, the change in this tryptophan fluorescence intensity is a nonlinear function of the electron equivalents added to the cyanide-inhibited enzyme. This nonlinear behavior is a result of the difference in redox potential between cytochrome a and CuA, which, at equilibrium, favors electron occupancy at cytochrome a. Studies on the cyanide-inhibited enzyme suggest that the conformational change is associated with reduction of CuA [Copeland, R. A., Smith, P. A., & Chan, S. I. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 7311-7316]. In this work we present tryptophan fluorescence data for the cyanide-inhibited enzyme at pH 8.9. Because of the pH dependence of the midpoint potential of cytochrome a in this form of the enzyme, the two low-potential centers become virtually isopotential at pH 8.9. The results obtained confirm our earlier conclusion that the observed conformational change is linked to the reduction of CuA only, rather than to the redox activity of both low-potential metal centers. We find that, in partially reduced cyanide-inhibited oxidase, raising the pH from 7.4 to 8.9 results in an intensification and red shift of the enzyme's tryptophan emission as the electron occupancy redistributes from cytochrome a to CuA. Moreover, when the fluorescence change is plotted as a function of the number of electrons added to the enzyme at pH 8.9, the data fit the nearly linear function expected for a conformational change triggered by reduction of CuA exclusively.  相似文献   

10.
Proton and electron transfer events during the reaction of solubilized fully reduced bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase with molecular oxygen were investigated using the flow-flash technique. Time-resolved spectral changes resulting from ligand binding and electron transfer events were detected simultaneously with pH changes in the bulk. The kinetics and spectral changes in the visible region (450-750 nm) were probed by optical multichannel detection, allowing high spectral resolution on time scales from 50 ns to 50 ms. Experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of pH-sensitive dyes (carboxyfluorescein at pH 6.5, phenol red at pH 7.5, and m-cresol purple at pH 8.5) which permitted separation of spectral changes due to proton transfer from those caused by ligand binding and electron transfer. The transient spectra recorded in the absence of dye were analyzed by singular-value decomposition and multiexponential fitting. Five apparent lifetimes (0.93 microseconds, 10 microseconds, 36 microseconds, 90 microseconds, and 1.3 ms at pH 7.5) could consistently be distinguished and provided a basis for a reaction mechanism consistent with our most recent kinetic model [Sucheta, A., Szundi, I., and Einarsdóttir, O. (1999) Biochemistry 37, 17905-17914]. The dye response indicated that proton uptake occurred concurrently with the two slowest electron transfer steps, in agreement with previous results based on single-wavelength detection [Hallén, S., and Nilsson, T. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 11853-11859]. The stoichiometry of the proton uptake reactions was approximately 1.3 +/- 0.3, 1.4 +/- 0.3, and 1.6 +/- 0.5 protons per enzyme at pH 6.5, 7.5, and 8.5, respectively. The electron transfer between heme a and CuA was limited by proton uptake on a 90 microseconds time scale. We have established the lower limit of the true rate constant for the electron transfer between CuA and heme a to be approximately 2 x 10(5) s-1.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
A battery of thermodynamic, kinetic, and structural approaches has indicated that the small α-helical protein BBL folds-unfolds via the one-state downhill scenario. Yet, single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy offers a more conflicting view. Single-molecule experiments at pH 6 show a unique half-unfolded conformational ensemble at mid denaturation, whereas other experiments performed at higher pH show a bimodal distribution, as expected for two-state folding. Here we use thermodynamic and laser T-jump kinetic experiments combined with theoretical modeling to investigate the pH dependence of BBL stability, folding kinetics and mechanism within the pH 6–11 range. We find that BBL unfolding is tightly coupled to the protonation of one of its residues with an apparent pKa of ∼7. Therefore, in chemical denaturation experiments around neutral pH BBL unfolds gradually, and also converts in binary fashion to the protonated species. Moreover, under the single-molecule experimental conditions (denaturant midpoint and 279 K), we observe that proton transfer is much slower than the ∼15 microseconds folding-unfolding kinetics of BBL. The relaxation kinetics is distinctly biphasic, and the overall relaxation time (i.e. 0.2–0.5 ms) becomes controlled by the proton transfer step. We then show that a simple theoretical model of protein folding coupled to proton transfer explains quantitatively all these results as well as the two sets of single-molecule experiments, including their more puzzling features. Interestingly, this analysis suggests that BBL unfolds following a one-state downhill folding mechanism at all conditions. Accordingly, the source of the bimodal distributions observed during denaturation at pH 7–8 is the splitting of the unique conformational ensemble of BBL onto two slowly inter-converting protonation species. Both, the unprotonated and protonated species unfold gradually (one-state downhill), but they exhibit different degree of unfolding at any given condition because the native structure is less stable for the protonated form.  相似文献   

13.
Intramolecular electron transfer between CuA and heme a in solubilized bacterial (Paracoccus denitrificans) cytochrome c oxidase was investigated by pulse radiolysis. CuA, the initial electron acceptor, was reduced by 1-methylnicotinamide radicals in a diffusion-controlled reaction, as monitored by absorption changes at 825 nm, followed by partial restoration of the absorption and paralleled by an increase in the heme a absorption at 605 nm. The latter observations indicate partial reoxidation of the CuA center and the concomitant reduction of heme a. The rate constants for heme a reduction and CuA reoxidation were identical within experimental error and independent of the enzyme concentration and its degree of reduction, demonstrating that a fast intramolecular electron equilibration is taking place between CuA and heme a. The rate constants for CuA --> heme a ET and the reverse heme a --> CuA process were found to be 20,400 s(-1) and 10,030 s(-1), respectively, at 25 degrees C and pH 7.5, which corresponds to an equilibrium constant of 2.0. Thermodynamic and activation parameters of these intramolecular ET reactions were determined. The significance of the results, particularly the low activation barriers, is discussed within the framework of the enzyme's known three-dimensional structure, potential ET pathways, and the calculated reorganization energies.  相似文献   

14.
Pre-steady state, stopped flow analysis of Escherichia coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase was performed by following the fluorescence of protein tryptophan and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer from protein tryptophan to bound NADH. The results indicate that binding of substrates is ordered, with coenzyme, NADH, binding first. Furthermore, the analysis indicated that there are two sets of sites on the tetrameric enzyme that can be differentiated by their kinetic behavior. NADH binding was consistent with an initial binding event followed by a slow conformational change for each site. The slow conformational change is responsible for the apparent tight binding of NADH to the apoenzyme but is too slow to participate in the catalytic cycle when the enzyme is rapidly turning over. Subsequent binding of the substrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, was characterized by a rapid equilibrium binding event followed by a conformational change for each site. Catalysis in the direction of NAD(+) reduction showed a distinct burst of activity followed by a slow rate of turnover, indicating that the rate-limiting step is after hydride transfer. Catalysis in the direction of NADH oxidation did not display burst kinetics, indicating that the rate-limiting step is at or before the hydride transfer step. The burst data indicated that the rate of NAD(+) reduction (3.8 s(-1)) is similar to the k(cat) of the enzyme (2-3 s(-1)) in that direction. However, analysis of the reaction with deuterated NADH failed to show an effect on the velocity of the reaction with a V(H)/V(D)=1.07+/-0.06. None of the other rates determined by stopped flow analysis could account for the k(cat) of the enzyme in either direction (forward k(cat)=0.01 s(-1), reverse k(cat)=2-3 s(-1)), suggesting that the rate-limiting step in both directions is a conformational change in the enzyme that is not detected optically.  相似文献   

15.
Patra AK  Udgaonkar JB 《Biochemistry》2007,46(42):11727-11743
The mechanisms of folding and unfolding of the small plant protein monellin have been delineated in detail. For this study, a single-chain variant of the natively two-chain monellin, MNEI, was used, in which the C terminus of chain B was connected to the N terminus of chain A by a Gly-Phe linker. Equilibrium guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced unfolding experiments failed to detect any partially folded intermediate that is stable enough to be populated at equilibrium to a significant extent. Kinetic experiments in which the refolding of GdnHCl-unfolded protein was monitored by measurement of the change in the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of the protein indicated the accumulation of three transient partially structured folding intermediates. The fluorescence change occurred in three kinetic phases: very fast, fast, and slow. It appears that the fast and slow changes in fluorescence occur on competing folding pathways originating from one unfolded form and that the very fast change in fluorescence occurs on a third parallel pathway originating from a second unfolded form of the protein. Kinetic experiments in which the refolding of alkali-unfolded protein was monitored by the change in the fluorescence of the hydrophobic dye 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid (ANS), consequent to the dye binding to the refolding protein, as well as by the change in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence, not only confirmed the presence of the three kinetic intermediates but also indicated the accumulation of one or more early intermediates at a few milliseconds of refolding. These experiments also exposed a very slow kinetic phase of refolding, which was silent to any change in the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of the protein. Hence, the spectroscopic studies indicated that refolding of single-chain monellin occurs in five distinct kinetic phases. Double-jump, interrupted-folding experiments, in which the accumulation of folding intermediates and native protein during the folding process could be determined quantitatively by an unfolding assay, indicated that the fast phase of fluorescence change corresponds to the accumulation of two intermediates of differing stabilities on competing folding pathways. They also indicated that the very slow kinetic phase of refolding, identified by ANS binding, corresponds to the formation of native protein. Kinetic experiments in which the unfolding of native protein in GdnHCl was monitored by the change in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence indicated that this change occurs in two kinetic phases. Double-jump, interrupted-unfolding experiments, in which the accumulation of unfolding intermediates and native protein during the unfolding process could be determined quantitatively by a refolding assay, indicated that the fast unfolding phase corresponds to the formation of fully unfolded protein via one unfolding pathway and that the slow unfolding phase corresponds to a separate unfolding pathway populated by partially unfolded intermediates. It is shown that the unfolded form produced by the fast unfolding pathway is the one which gives rise to the very fast folding pathway and that the unfolded form produced by the slower unfolding pathway is the one which gives rise to the slow and fast folding pathways.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the contribution of tryptophan-121 (Trp121) residue to the structure and function of soluble CuA domain of cytochrome c oxidase, three mutant proteins, Trp121Tyr, Trp121Leu and Trp121-deleted mutant of the soluble domain of Paracoccus versutus cytochrome c oxidase, were constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3). Optical spectral studies showed that both the coordination structure of the CuA center and the secondary structure of the protein were changed significantly in the Leu substitution and deletion mutants of Trp121. Their electron transfer activity with cytochrome c was inhibited severely, as shown in stopped-flow kinetic studies. However, the CuA center can be reconstructed in the Trp121Tyr mutant although its stability decreases compared with the wild-type protein. This mutant keeps the same secondary structure as the wild-type protein, but can only transfer electrons with cytochrome c at a rate of one-seventh-fold. Based on the information on the structure, we also investigated and analyzed the possible factors that affect electron transfer. It appears that the aromatic ring, the size of the side chain and the hydrogen bonding ability of the Trp121 are crucial to the structure and function of the soluble CuA domain.  相似文献   

17.
Heredia VV  Thomson J  Nettleton D  Sun S 《Biochemistry》2006,45(24):7553-7562
The transient kinetics of glucose binding to glucokinase (GK) was studied using stopped-flow fluorescence spectrophotometry to investigate the underlying mechanism of positive cooperativity of monomeric GK with glucose. Glucose binding to GK was shown to display biphasic kinetics that fit best to a reversible two-step mechanism. GK initially binds glucose to form a transient intermediate, namely, E* x glucose, followed by a conformational change to a catalytically competent E x glucose complex. The microscopic rate constants for each step were determined as follows: on rate k1 of 557 M(-1) s(-1) and off rate k(-1) of 8.1 s(-1) for E* x glucose formation, and forward rate k2 of 0.45 s(-1) and reverse rate k(-2) of 0.28 s(-1) for the conformational change from E* x glucose to E x glucose. These results suggest that the enzyme conformational change induced by glucose binding is a reversible, slow event that occurs outside the catalytic cycle (kcat = 38 s(-1)). This slow transition between the two enzyme conformations modulated by glucose likely forms the kinetic foundation for the allosteric regulation. Furthermore, the kinetics of the enzyme conformational change was altered in favor of E x glucose formation in D2O, accompanied by a decrease in cooperativity with glucose (Hill slope of 1.3 in D2O vs 1.7 in H2O). The deuterium solvent isotope effects confirm the role of the conformational change in the magnitude of glucose cooperativity. Similar studies were conducted with GK activating mutation Y214C at the allosteric activator site that is likely involved in the protein domain rearrangement associated with glucose binding. The mutation enhanced equilibrium glucose binding by a combination of effects on both the formation of E* x glucose and an enzyme conformational change to E x glucose. Kinetic simulation by KINSIM supports the conclusion that the kinetic cooperativity of GK arises from slow glucose-induced conformational changes in GK.  相似文献   

18.
Introducing site-directed mutations in surface-exposed residues of subunit II of the heme aa3 cytochrome c oxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans, we analyze the kinetic parameters of electron transfer from reduced horse heart cytochrome c. Specifically we address the following issues: (a) which residues on oxidase contribute to the docking site for cytochrome c, (b) is an aromatic side chain required for electron entry from cytochrome c, and (c) what is the molecular basis for the previously observed biphasic reaction kinetics. From our data we conclude that tryptophan 121 on subunit II is the sole entry point for electrons on their way to the CuA center and that its precise spatial arrangement, but not its aromatic nature, is a prerequisite for efficient electron transfer. With different reaction partners and experimental conditions, biphasicity can always be induced and is critically dependent on the ionic strength during the reaction. For an alternative explanation to account for this phenomenon, we find no evidence for a second cytochrome c binding site on oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
In an attempt to identify potential regulatory mechanisms for erythrocyte membrane-cytoskeletal interactions, the kinetics and pH dependence of the band 3-ankyrin interaction were investigated. Association of 125I-ankyrin with KI-stripped inside-out erythrocyte membrane vesicles was found to proceed in two kinetic phases. The initial, fast phase (t1/2 approximately 15-30 min) involved predominantly the binding of ankyrin to low affinity sites (KD approximately 130 nM) in a pH-dependent manner. The apparent pKa values describing this reversible pH dependence (7.2 +/- 0.1 and 9.2 +/- 0.1) defined states of band 3 with high, moderate, and no capacity to bind ankyrin (in order of increasing pH). Since the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 also exists in 3 distinct conformational states characterized by apparent pKa values of 7.2 and 9.2, it was hypothesized that the reversible structural equilibrium in band 3 could influence ankyrin binding. The second or slow phase of ankyrin binding to band 3 involved the conversion of low to high affinity sites (KD approximately 13 nM). This phase, which was largely temperature and pH independent, required roughly an order of magnitude longer to reach completion than the fast phase. Unfortunately, even though the slow phase could be cleanly separated from the fast phase at low pH, insufficient data were available to formulate a physical interpretation of its origin. Significantly, however, even after completion of the slow phase under the most quantitative binding conditions identified, a maximum of only 26% of the band 3 was found to bind ankyrin in situ. Although higher ankyrin-band 3 stoichiometries may be achievable with the isolated cytoplasmic fragment of band 3, we interpret the above 1:4 stoichiometry to suggest that the tetramer of band 3 constitutes the predominant ankyrin binding oligomer of band 3 on the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Polishchuk AL  Lear JD  Ma C  Lamb RA  Pinto LH  Degrado WF 《Biochemistry》2010,49(47):10061-10071
The influenza A/M2 protein exhibits inwardly rectifying, pH-activated proton transport that saturates at low pH. A comparison of high-resolution structures of the transmembrane domain at high and low pH suggests that pH-dependent conformational changes may facilitate proton conduction by alternately changing the accessibility of the N-terminal and C-terminal regions of the channel as a proton transits through the transmembrane domain. Here, we show that M2 functionally reconstituted in liposomes populates at least three different conformational states over a physiologically relevant pH range, with transition midpoints that are consistent with previously reported His37 pK(a) values. We then develop and test two similar, quantitative mechanistic models of proton transport, where protonation shifts the equilibrium between structural states having different proton affinities and solvent accessibilities. The models account well for a collection of experimental data sets over a wide range of pH values and voltages and require only a small number of adjustable parameters to accurately describe the data. While the kinetic models do not require any specific conformation for the protein, they nevertheless are consistent with a large body of structural information based on high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance and crystallographic structures, optical spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics calculations.  相似文献   

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