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1.
Sadoski RC Engstrom G Tian H Zhang L Yu CA Yu L Durham B Millett F 《Biochemistry》2000,39(15):4231-4236
Electron transfer between the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (Fe(2)S(2)) and cytochrome c(1) was studied using the ruthenium dimer, Ru(2)D, to either photoreduce or photooxidize cytochrome c(1) within 1 micros. Ru(2)D has a charge of +4, which allows it to bind with high affinity to the cytochrome bc(1) complex. Flash photolysis of a solution containing beef cytochrome bc(1), Ru(2)D, and a sacrificial donor resulted in reduction of cytochrome c(1) within 1 micros, followed by electron transfer from cytochrome c(1) to Fe(2)S(2) with a rate constant of 90,000 s(-1). Flash photolysis of reduced beef bc(1), Ru(2)D, and a sacrificial acceptor resulted in oxidation of cytochrome c(1) within 1 micros, followed by electron transfer from Fe(2)S(2) to cytochrome c(1) with a rate constant of 16,000 s(-1). Oxidant-induced reduction of cytochrome b(H) was observed with a rate constant of 250 s(-1) in the presence of antimycin A. Electron transfer from Fe(2)S(2) to cytochrome c(1) within the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cyt bc(1) complex was found to have a rate constant of 60,000 s(-1) at 25 degrees C, while reduction of cytochrome b(H) occurred with a rate constant of 1000 s(-1). Double mutation of Ala-46 and Ala-48 in the neck region of the Rieske protein to prolines resulted in a decrease in the rate constants for both cyt c(1) and cyt b(H) reduction to 25 s(-1), indicating that a conformational change in the Rieske protein has become rate-limiting. 相似文献
2.
Kyndt JA Fitch JC Berry RE Stewart MC Whitley K Meyer TE Walker FA Cusanovich MA 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2012,1817(5):811-818
A triad of tyrosine residues (Y152-154) in the cytochrome c(1) subunit (C1) of the Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) complex (BC1) is ideally positioned to interact with cytochrome c(2) (C2). Mutational analysis of these three tyrosines showed that, of the three, Y154 is the most important, since its mutation to alanine resulted in significantly reduced levels, destabilization, and inactivation of BC1. A second-site revertant of this mutant that regained photosynthetic capacity was found to have acquired two further mutations-A181T and A200V. The Y152Q mutation did not change the spectral or electrochemical properties of C1, and showed wild-type enzymatic C2 reduction rates, indicating that this mutation did not introduce major structural changes in C1 nor affect overall activity. Mutations Y153Q and Y153A, on the other hand, clearly affect the redox properties of C1 (e.g. by lowering the midpoint potential as much as 117mV in Y153Q) and the activity by 90% and 50%, respectively. A more conservative Y153F mutant on the other hand, behaves similarly to wild-type. This underscores the importance of an aromatic residue at position Y153, presumably to maintain close packing with P184, which modeling indicates is likely to stabilize the sixth heme ligand conformation. 相似文献
3.
Structural analysis of the bc(1) complex suggests that the extra membrane domain of iron-sulfur protein (ISP) undergoes substantial movement during the catalytic cycle. Binding of Qo site inhibitors to this complex affects the mobility of ISP. Taking advantage of the difference in the pH dependence of the redox midpoint potentials of cytochrome c(1) and ISP, we have measured electron transfer between the [2Fe-2S] cluster and heme c(1) in native and inhibitor-treated partially reduced cytochrome bc(1) complexes. The rate of the pH-induced cytochrome c(1) reduction can be estimated by conventional stopped-flow techniques (t1/2, 1-2 ms), whereas the rate of cytochrome c(1) oxidation is too high for stopped-flow measurement. These results suggest that oxidized ISP has a higher mobility than reduced ISP and that the movement of reduced ISP may require an energy input from another component. In the 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT)-inhibited complex, the rate of cytochrome c(1) reduction is greatly decreased to a t1/2 of approximately 2.8 s. An even lower rate is observed with the stigmatellin-treated complex. These results support the idea that UHDBT and stigmatellin arrest the [2Fe-2S] cluster at a fixed position, 31 A from heme c(1), making electron transfer very slow. 相似文献
4.
Tian H Sadoski R Zhang L Yu CA Yu L Durham B Millett F 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2000,275(13):9587-9595
The interaction domain for cytochrome c on the cytochrome bc(1) complex was studied using a series of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc(1) mutants in which acidic residues on the surface of cytochrome c(1) were substituted with neutral or basic residues. Intracomplex electron transfer was studied using a cytochrome c derivative labeled with ruthenium trisbipyridine at lysine 72 (Ru-72-Cc). Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between Ru-72-Cc and cytochrome bc(1) at low ionic strength resulted in electron transfer from photoreduced heme c to cytochrome c(1) with a rate constant of k(et) = 6 x 10(4) s(-1). Compared with the wild-type enzyme, the mutants substituted at Glu-74, Glu-101, Asp-102, Glu-104, Asp-109, Glu-162, Glu-163, and Glu-168 have significantly lower k(et) values as well as significantly higher equilibrium dissociation constants and steady-state K(m) values. Mutations at acidic residues 56, 79, 82, 83, 97, 98, 213, 214, 217, 220, and 223 have no significant effect on either rapid kinetics or steady-state kinetics. These studies indicate that acidic residues on opposite sides of the heme crevice of cytochrome c(1) are involved in binding positively charged cytochrome c. These acidic residues on the intramembrane surface of cytochrome c(1) direct the diffusion and binding of cytochrome c from the intramembrane space. 相似文献
5.
The binding domain on horse cytochrome c and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c2 for the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The interaction of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex with Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome c2 and horse cytochrome c was studied by using specific lysine modification and ionic strength dependence methods. The rate of the reactions with both cytochrome c and cytochrome c2 decreased rapidly with increasing ionic strength above 0.2 M NaCl. The ionic strength dependence suggested that electrostatic interactions were equally important to the reactions of the two cytochromes, even though they have opposite net charges at pH 7.0. In order to define the interaction domain on horse cytochrome c, the reaction rates of derivatives modified at single lysine amino groups with trifluoroacetyl or trifluoromethylphenylcarbamoyl were measured. Modification of lysine-8, -13, -27, -72, -79, and -87 surrounding the heme crevice was found to significantly lower the rate of the reaction, while modification of lysines in other regions had no effect. This result indicates that lysines surrounding the heme crevice of horse cytochrome c are involved in electrostatic interactions with carboxylate groups at the binding site on the cytochrome bc1 complex. In order to define the reaction domain on cytochrome c2, a fraction consisting of a mixture of singly labeled 4-carboxy-2,6-dinitrophenylcytochrome c2 derivatives modified at lysine-35, -88, -95, -97, and -105 and several unidentified lysines was prepared. Although it was not possible to resolve these derivatives, all of the identified lysines are located on the front surface of cytochrome c2 near the heme crevice. The rate of reaction of this fraction was significantly smaller than that of native cytochrome c2, suggesting that the binding domain on cytochrome c2 is also located at the heme crevice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
6.
Redox transitions in the Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) complex were investigated by perfusion-induced attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy combined with synchronous visible spectroscopy, in both the wild type and a cytochrome c(1) point mutant, M183K, in which the midpoint potential of heme was lowered from the wild-type value of 320 mV to 60 mV. Overall redox difference spectra of the wild type and M183K mutant were essentially identical, indicating that the mutation did not cause any major structural perturbation. Spectra were compared with data on the bovine bc(1) complex, and tentative assignments of several bands could be made by comparison with available data on model compounds and crystallographic structures. The bacterial spectra showed contributions from ubiquinone that were much larger than in the bovine enzyme, arising from additional bound and adventitious ubiquinone. The M183K mutant enabled selective reduction of the iron-sulfur protein which in turn allowed the IR redox difference spectra of ISP and cytochrome c(1) to be deconvoluted at high signal/noise ratios, and features of these spectra are interpreted in light of structural and mechanistic information. 相似文献
7.
Effect of famoxadone on photoinduced electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center and cytochrome c1 in the cytochrome bc1 complex 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Xiao K Engstrom G Rajagukguk S Yu CA Yu L Durham B Millett F 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2003,278(13):11419-11426
Famoxadone is a new cytochrome bc(1) Q(o) site inhibitor that immobilizes the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) in the b conformation. The effects of famoxadone on electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center (2Fe-2S) and cyt c(1) were studied using a ruthenium dimer to photoinitiate the reaction. The rate constant for electron transfer in the forward direction from 2Fe-2S to cyt c(1) was found to be 16,000 s(-1) in bovine cyt bc(1). Binding famoxadone decreased this rate constant to 1,480 s(-1), consistent with a decrease in mobility of the ISP. Reverse electron transfer from cyt c(1) to 2Fe-2S was found to be biphasic in bovine cyt bc(1) with rate constants of 90,000 and 7,300 s(-1). In the presence of famoxadone, reverse electron transfer was monophasic with a rate constant of 1,420 s(-1). It appears that the rate constants for the release of the oxidized and reduced ISP from the b conformation are the same in the presence of famoxadone. The effects of famoxadone binding on electron transfer were also studied in a series of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cyt bc(1) mutants involving residues at the interface between the Rieske protein and cyt c(1) and/or cyt b. 相似文献
8.
The destruction of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster ([2Fe-2S]) in the bc(1) complex by hematoporphyrin-promoted photoinactivation resulted in the complex becoming proton-permeable. To study further the role of this [2Fe-2S] cluster in proton translocation of the bc(1) complex, Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutants expressing His-tagged cytochrome bc(1) complexes with mutations at the histidine ligands of the [2Fe-2S] cluster were generated and characterized. These mutants lacked the [2Fe-2S] cluster and possessed no bc(1) activity. When the mutant complex was co-inlaid in phospholipid vesicles with intact bovine mitochondrial bc(1) complex or cytochrome c oxidase, the proton ejection, normally observed in intact reductase or oxidase vesicles during the oxidation of their corresponding substrates, disappeared. This indicated the creation of a proton-leaking channel in the mutant complex, whose [2Fe-2S] cluster was lacking. Insertion of the bc(1) complex lacking the head domain of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein, removed by thermolysin digestion, into PL vesicles together with mitochondrial bc(1) complex also rendered the vesicles proton-permeable. Addition of the excess purified head domain of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein partially restored the proton-pumping activity. These results indicated that elimination of the [2Fe-2S] cluster in mutant bc(1) complexes opened up an otherwise closed proton channel within the bc(1) complex. It was speculated that in the normal catalytic cycle of the bc(1) complex, the [2Fe-2S] cluster may function as a proton-exiting gate. 相似文献
9.
We have changed nine conserved aromatic amino acids by site-directed mutagenesis of the cloned iron-sulfur protein gene to determine if any of these residues form an obligatory conduit for electron transfer within the iron-sulfur protein of the yeast cytochrome bc1 complex. The residues include W111, F117, W152, F173, W176, F177, H184, Y205 and F207. Greater than 70% of the catalytic activity was retained for all of the mutated iron-sulfur proteins, except for those containing a W152L and a W176L-F177L double mutation, for which the activity was approximately 45%. The crystal structures of the bc1 complex indicate that F177 and H184 are at the surface of the iron-sulfur protein near the surface of cytochrome c1, but not directly in a linear pathway between the iron-sulfur cluster and the c1 heme. The pre-steady-state rates of reduction of cytochromes b and c1 in mutants in which F177 and H184 were changed to non-aromatic residues were approximately 70-85% of the wild-type rates. There was a large decrease in iron-sulfur protein levels in mitochondrial membranes resulting from the W152L mutation and the W176L-F177L double mutation, and a small decrease for the Y205L, W176L and F177L mutations. This indicates that the decreases in activity resulting from these amino acid changes are due to instability of the altered proteins. These results show that these aromatic amino acids are unnecessary for electron transfer, but several are required for structural stability. 相似文献
10.
Sequence alignment of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) of cytochrome bc(1) complex from various sources reveals that bacterial ISPs contain an extra fragment. To study the role of this fragment in bacterial cytochrome bc(1) complex, Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutants expressing His-tagged cytochrome bc(1) complexes with deletion or single- or multiple-alanine substitution at various positions of this fragment (residues 96-107) were generated and characterized. The ISPDelta(96-107), ISP(96-107)A, and ISP(104-107)A mutant cells, in which residues 96-107 of ISP are deleted, and residues 96-107 and 104-107 are substituted with alanine, respectively, do not grow photosynthetically and show no bc(1) complex activity in intracytoplasmic membranes prepared from these mutant cells. The ISP(96-99)A, in which residues 96-99 are substituted with alanine, grows photosynthetically at a rate comparable to that of the complement cells, whereas ISP(100-103)A, in which residues 100-103 are substituted with alanine, has a longer lag period prior to photosynthetic growth. Chromatophores prepared from these two mutant cells have 48% and 9% of the bc(1) activity found in the complement chromatophores. The loss (or decrease) of bc(1) activity in these mutant membranes results from a lack (or decrease) of ISP in the membrane due to ISP protein instability and not from mutations affecting the assembly of cytochromes b and c(1) into the membrane, the binding affinity of cytochrome b to cytochrome c(1), or the ability of these two cytochromes to interact with ISP or subunit IV. The order of essentiality of residues in this fragment is residues 104-107 > residues 100-103 > residues 96-99. 相似文献
11.
The cytochrome bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides can restore cytochrome c2-independent photosynthetic growth to a Rhodobacter capsulatus mutant lacking cytochrome bc1. 总被引:3,自引:2,他引:3 下载免费PDF全文
Plasmids encoding the structural genes for the Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome (cyt) bc1 complexes were introduced into strains of R. capsulatus lacking the cyt bc1 complex, with and without cyt c2. The R. capsulatus merodiploids contained higher than wild-type levels of cyt bc1 complex, as evidenced by immunological and spectroscopic analyses. On the other hand, the R. sphaeroides-R. capsulatus hybrid merodiploids produced only barely detectable amounts of R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex in R. capsulatus. Nonetheless, when they contained cyt c2, they were capable of photosynthetic growth, as judged by the sensitivity of this growth to specific inhibitors of the photochemical reaction center and the cyt bc1 complex, such as atrazine, myxothiazol, and stigmatellin. Interestingly, in the absence of cyt c2, although the R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex was able to support the photosynthetic growth of a cyt bc1-less mutant of R. capsulatus in rich medium, it was unable to do so when C4 dicarboxylic acids, such as malate and succinate, were used as the sole carbon source. Even this conditional ability of R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex to replace that of R. capsulatus for photosynthetic growth suggests that in the latter species the cyt c2-independent rereduction of the reaction center is not due to a structural property unique to the R. capsulatus cyt bc1 complex. Similarly, the inability of R. sphaeroides to exhibit a similar pathway is not due to some inherent property of its cyt bc1 complex. 相似文献
12.
The modified Q cycle mechanism accounts for the proton and charge translocation stoichiometry of the bc(1) complex, and is now widely accepted. However the mechanism by which the requisite bifurcation of electron flow at the Q(o) site reaction is enforced is not clear. One of several proposals involves conformational gating of the docking of the Rieske ISP at the Q(o) site, controlled by the stage of the reaction cycle. Effects of different Q(o)-site inhibitors on the position of the ISP seen in crystals may reflect the same conformational mechanism, in which case understanding how different inhibitors control the position of the ISP may be a key to understanding the enforcement of bifurcation at the Q(o) site (Table?1). Here we examine the available structures of cytochrome bc(1) with different Q(o)-site inhibitors and different ISP positions to look for clues to this mechanism. The effect of ISP removal on binding affinity of the inhibitors stigmatellin and famoxadone suggest a "mutual stabilization" of inhibitor binding and ISP docking, however this thermodynamic observation sheds little light on the mechanism. The cd(1) helix of cytochrome b moves in such a way as to accommodate docking when inhibitors favoring docking are bound, but it is impossible with the current structures to say whether this movement of α-cd(1) is a cause or result of ISP docking. One component of the movement of the linker between E and F helices also correlates with the type of inhibitor and ISP position, and seems to be related to the H-bonding pattern of Y279 of cytochrome b. An H-bond from Y279 to the ISP, and its possible modulation by movement of F275 in the presence of famoxadone and related inhibitors, or its competition with an alternate H-bond to I269 of cytochrome b that may be destabilized by bound famoxadone, suggest other possible mechanisms. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins. 相似文献
13.
Cytochrome bc1 complex catalyzes the reaction of electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (or cytochrome c2) and couples this reaction to proton translocation across the membrane. Crystallization of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex resulted in crystals containing only three core subunits. To mitigate the problem of subunit IV being dissociated from the three-subunit core complex during crystallization, we recently engineered an R. sphaeroides mutant in which the N-terminus of subunit IV was fused to the C-terminus of cytochrome c1 with a 14-glycine linker between the two fusing subunits, and a 6-histidine tag at the C-terminus of subunit IV (c1-14Gly-IV-6His). The purified fusion mutant complex shows higher electron transfer activity, more structural stability, and less superoxide generation as compared to the wild-type enzyme. Preliminary crystallization attempts with this mutant complex yielded crystals containing four subunits and diffracting X-rays to 5.5 Å resolution. 相似文献
14.
A Kotlyar N Borovok M Hazani I Szundi O Einarsdóttir 《European journal of biochemistry》2000,267(18):5805-5809
A novel method for initiating intramolecular electron transfer in cytochrome c oxidase is reported. The method is based upon photoreduction of cytochrome c labeled with thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate in complex with cytochrome oxidase. The thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-labeled cytochrome c was prepared by incubating the thiol reactive form of the dye with yeast iso-1-cytochrome c, containing a single cysteine residue. Laser pulse excitation of a stoichiometrical complex between thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-cytochrome c and bovine heart cytochrome oxidase at low ionic strength resulted in the reduction of cytochrome c by the excited form of thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate and subsequent intramolecular electron transfer from the reduced cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. The maximum efficiency by a single laser pulse resulted in the reduction of approximately 17% of cytochrome a, and was achieved only at a 1 : 1 ratio of cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. At higher cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase ratios the heme a reduction was strongly suppressed. 相似文献
15.
K Konishi S R Van Doren D M Kramer A R Crofts R B Gennis 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1991,266(22):14270-14276
The ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of four subunits. One of these subunits, cytochrome c1, is the site of interaction with cytochrome c2, a periplasmic protein. In addition, the sequences of the fbcC gene and of the cytochrome c1 subunit that it encodes suggest that the protein should be located on the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane and that it is anchored to the membrane by a single membrane-spanning alpha-helix located at the carboxyl-terminal end of the polypeptide. Site-directed mutagenesis of the fbcC gene was used to alter the codon for Gln228 to a stop codon. This results in the production of a truncated version of the cytochrome c1 subunit that lacks the membrane anchor at the carboxyl terminus. The bc1 complex fails to assemble properly as a result of this mutation, but the Rb. sphaeroides cells expressing the altered gene contain a water-soluble form of cytochrome c1 in the periplasm. The water-soluble cytochrome c1 was purified and characterized. The amino-terminal sequence is identical with that of the membrane-bound subunit, indicating the signal sequence is properly processed. High pressure liquid chromatography gel filtration chromatography indicates it is monomeric (28 kDa). The heme content and electrochemical properties are similar to those of the intact subunit within the complex. Flash-induced electron transfer kinetics measured using whole cells demonstrated that the water-soluble cytochrome c1 is competent as a reductant for cytochrome c2 within the periplasmic space. These data show that the isolated water-soluble cytochrome c1 retains many of the properties of the membrane-bound subunit of the bc1 complex and, therefore, will be useful for further structural and functional characterization. 相似文献
16.
The flash-induced formation of transmembrane electric potential differences (measured by carotenoid bandshift) and redox changes of cytochrome bh (b561) were monitored spectrophotometrically in Rb. sphaeroides chromatophores in a pH range from 7.5 to 10.0. It is shown that in the presence of antimycin A and at pH less than 8.3 the myxothiazol-sensitive, antimycin-insensitive component of the carotenoid bandshift is kinetically coupled to cytochrome bh reduction. The kinetics of both processes can be described by a single exponent with a rise time of about 10 ms. Alkalization of the medium (8.3 less than or equal to pH less than or equal to 9.2) causes the appearance of an additional constituent in this phase of the carotenoid response with the rise time varying in the range of 100-300 ms. With a further pH increase (pH greater than 9.2), the electrogenic constituent, kinetically linked to cytochrome bh reduction, diminishes. The obtained data are discussed within the framework of the scheme, assuming that the electron transfer between bl and bh hemes in the bc1 complex is, under certain conditions, accompanied by proton transfer in the same direction. 相似文献
17.
Devanathan S Salamon Z Tollin G Fitch JC Meyer TE Berry EA Cusanovich MA 《Biochemistry》2007,46(24):7138-7145
The dissociation constants for the binding of Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome c2 and its K93P mutant to the cytochrome bc1 complex embedded in a phospholipid bilayer were measured by plasmon waveguide resonance spectroscopy in the presence and absence of the inhibitor stigmatellin. The reduced form of cytochrome c2 strongly binds to reduced cytochrome bc1 (Kd = 0.02 microM) but binds much more weakly to the oxidized form (Kd = 3.1 microM). In contrast, oxidized cytochrome c2 binds to oxidized cytochrome bc1 in a biphasic fashion with Kd values of 0.11 and 0.58 microM. Such a biphasic interaction is consistent with binding to two separate sites or conformations of oxidized cytochrome c2 and/or cytochrome bc1. However, in the presence of stigmatellin, we find that oxidized cytochrome c2 binds to oxidized cytochrome bc1 in a monophasic fashion with high affinity (Kd = 0.06 microM) and reduced cytochrome c2 binds less strongly (Kd = 0.11 microM) but approximately 30-fold more tightly than in the absence of stigmatellin. Structural studies with cytochrome bc1, with and without the inhibitor stigmatellin, have led to the proposal that the Rieske protein is mobile, moving between the cytochrome b and cytochrome c1 components during turnover. In one conformation, the Rieske protein binds near the heme of cytochrome c1, while the cytochrome c2 binding site is also near the cytochrome c1 heme but on the opposite side from the Rieske site, where cytochrome c2 cannot directly interact with Rieske. However, the inhibitor, stigmatellin, freezes the Rieske protein iron-sulfur cluster in a conformation proximal to cytochrome b and distal to cytochrome c1. We conclude from this that the dual conformation of the Rieske protein is primarily responsible for biphasic binding of oxidized cytochrome c2 to cytochrome c1. This optimizes turnover by maximizing binding of the substrate, oxidized cytochrome c2, when the iron-sulfur cluster is proximal to cytochrome b and minimizing binding of the product, reduced cytochrome c2, when it is proximal to cytochrome c1. 相似文献
18.
《BBA》2023,1864(2):148957
The electron transfer reactions within wild-type Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 (cyt bc1) were studied using a binuclear ruthenium complex to rapidly photooxidize cyt c1. When cyt c1, the iron?sulfur center Fe2S2, and cyt bH were reduced before the reaction, photooxidation of cyt c1 led to electron transfer from Fe2S2 to cyt c1 with a rate constant of ka = 80,000 s?1, followed by bifurcated reduction of both Fe2S2 and cyt bL by QH2 in the Qo site with a rate constant of k2 = 3000 s?1. The resulting Q then traveled from the Qo site to the Qi site and oxidized one equivalent each of cyt bL and cyt bH with a rate constant of k3 = 340 s?1. The rate constant ka was decreased in a nonlinear fashion by a factor of 53 as the viscosity was increased to 13.7. A mechanism that is consistent with the effect of viscosity involves rotational diffusion of the iron?sulfur protein from the b state with reduced Fe2S2 close to cyt bL to one or more intermediate states, followed by rotation to the final c1 state with Fe2S2 close to cyt c1, and rapid electron transfer to cyt c1. 相似文献
19.
The effect of molecular oxygen on the electron transfer activity of the cytochrome bc(1) complex was investigated by determining the activity of the complex under the aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Molecular oxygen increases the activity of Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc(1) complex up to 82%, depending on the intactness of the complex. Since oxygen enhances the reduction rate of heme b(L), but shows no effect on the reduction rate of heme b(H), the effect of oxygen in the electron transfer sequence of the cytochrome bc(1) complex is at the step of heme b(L) reduction during bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. 相似文献
20.
The smallest molecular weight subunit (subunit IV), which contains no redox prosthetic group, is the only supernumerary subunit in the four-subunit Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex. This subunit is involved in Q binding and the structural integrity of the complex. When the cytochrome bc1 complex is photoaffinity labeled with [3H]azido-Q derivative, radioactivity is found in subunits IV and I (cytochrome b), indicating that these two subunits are responsible for Q binding in the complex. When the subunit IV gene (fbcQ) is deleted from the R. sphaeroides chromosome, the resulting strain (RSdeltaIV) requires a period of adaptation before the start of photosynthetic growth. The cytochrome bc1 complex in adapted RSdeltaIV chromatophores is labile to detergent treatment (60-75% inactivation), and shows a four-fold increase in the Km for Q2H2. The first two changes indicate a structural role of subunit IV; the third change supports its Q-binding function. Tryptophan-79 is important for structural and Q-binding functions of subunit IV. Subunit IV is overexpressed in Escherichia coli as a GST fusion protein using the constructed expression vector, pGEX/IV. Purified recombinant subunit IV is functionally active as it can restore the bc1 complex activity from the three-subunit core complex to the same level as that of wild-type or complement complex. Three regions in the subunit IV sequence, residues 86-109, 77-85, and 41-55, are essential for interaction with the core complex because deleting one of these regions yields a subunit completely or partially unable to restore cytochrome bc1 from the core complex. 相似文献