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1.
The reaction between cytochrome c oxidase and ferrocytochrome c has been investigated by the stopped-flow method. It has been found that only one electron acceptor, a heme group, in the oxidase is rapidly reduced by cytochrome c. The presence of N3- does not affect the reduction of the acceptor, which supports the hypothesis that this is identical with cytochrome a. The results are consistent with the existence of a simple equilibrium between cytochrome a and cytochrome c: c-2 + a-3+ in equilibrium c-3+ + a-2+ with an equilibrium constant corresponding to an oxidation-reduction potential of cytochrome a 30 mV higher than that for cytochrome c at pH 7.4. The oxidation-reduction potential of the a-3+ /a-2+ couple, 285 mV (based on a potential of 255 mV for cytochrome c), and the optical properties of the reduced form indicate that it is identical with neither of the reduced hemes seen in potentiometric titrations. The oxidase species resulting from the rapid reduction of cytochrome a by cytochrome c is proposed to represent a metastable intermediate state which, under anaerobic conditions, eventually is transformed into a more stable state characterized by a reduced high-potential heme.  相似文献   

2.
The possible influence of residue Phe-82 in the cytochrome c alkaline isomerization has been evaluated by spectrophotometric pH titrations of a family of mutant yeast iso-1-cytochromes c in which the identity of the residue at this position has been varied. The pKa for the exchange of the Met-80 heme iron ligand was determined from pH titrations in which the S----Fe charge-transfer band (695 nm) was monitored and was found to be 8.5 for the wild type, 7.7 for Ser-82, 7.7 for Gly-82, 7.2 for Leu-82, and 7.2 for Ile-82. pH-jump experiments [Davis et al. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 2624] established that substitutions at position 82 affect the alkaline isomerization by lowering the pKa of the titrating group by as much as 1.4 pK units; for the Ser-82 and Gly-82 variants, there is also a small effect on the Keq for the ligand exchange equilibrium. On the basis of these findings, we conclude that one critical role for Phe-82 in the wild-type protein is stabilization of the native heme binding environment.  相似文献   

3.
A novel cytochrome c and a catalase-peroxidase with alkaline peroxidase activity were purified from the culture supernatant of Bacillus sp. No.13 and characterized. The cytochrome c exhibited absorption maxima at 408 nm (Soret band) in its oxidized state, and 550 (alpha-band), 521 (beta-band), and 415 (Soret band) nm in its reduced state. The native cytochrome c with a relative molecular mass of 15,000 was composed of two identical subunits. The cytochrome c showed over 50 times higher peroxidase activity than those of known c-type cytochromes from various sources. The optimum pH and temperature of the peroxidase activity were about 10.0 and 70 degrees C, respectively. The peroxidase activity is stable in the pH range of 6.0 to 10.8 (30 degrees C, 1-h treatment), and at temperatures up to 80 degrees C (pH 8.5, 20-min treatment). The heme content was determined to be 1 heme per subunit. The amino acid sequence of the cytochrome c showed high homology with those of the c-type cytochromes from Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus sp. PS3. The catalase-peroxidase showed high catalase activity and considerable peroxidase activity, the specific activities being 55,000 and 0.94 micromol/min/mg, respectively. The optimum pH and temperature of the peroxidase activity were in the range of 6.4 to 10.1 and 60 degrees C, respectively. The catalase-peroxidase showed a lower K(m) value (0.67 mM) as to H(2)O(2) than known catalase-peroxidases.  相似文献   

4.
The redox properties, the site of action of the inhibitor NQNO, and the question of interheme transfer in the chloroplast cytochrome b6 have been examined with regard to the role of the b6-f complex in quinol oxidation and H+ translocation. (i) The two hemes of the cytochrome ba and bp, have similar (delta Em less than or equal to 50 mV) oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials that are pH-independent in the range pH 6.5-8.0 (Em7 = -40 mV) but are pH dependent below this range with an estimated pK = 6.7. (ii) Only half of cytochrome b6, the stromal-side heme, ba, was reducible by NADPH and ferredoxin. (iii) The 2-3-fold increase (to 0.60 +/- 0.09 heme/600 Chl) in the amplitude of flash-induced cytochrome reduction caused by NQNO was not affected when heme ba was initially reduced, implying that NQNO affects flash reduction at the site of heme bp. (iv) Multiple light flashes did not increase the amplitude of b6 reduction in the presence or absence of NQNO or show binary oscillations. Together with localization of a site of action of NQNO near heme bp, these data provide no evidence for efficient electron transfer from heme bp to heme ba as specified by the Q cycle model. (v) NQNO interaction with heme bp does not block its oxidation, since reoxidation of the flash-reduced cytochrome in its presence or absence was 4-5 times faster (t1/2 approximately 30 ms) when heme ba was reduced. The faster oxidation of the photoreduced cytochrome after NADPH-Fd reduction of heme ba indicates that the oxidation of ba and bp may be cooperative.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochrome c synthetase has been solubilized from yeast mitochondria using Triton X-100 and fractionated with ammonium sulfate. Use of this partially purified enzyme has permitted us to isolate a quantity of iso-1-cytochrome c formed from 125I-labeled apocytochrome c and hemin in the presence of a NADPH-generating system. Visible absorption spectra (pH 8.0 or 5.0) including alpha, beta, and Soret bands and their molar absorption coefficients of this enzymatically synthesized cytochrome c in the oxidized and reduced states are the same, within experimental error, as those of native cytochrome c. Pyridine ferrohemochrome (pH 13) of the synthesized species also exhibits the same alpha and beta bands as those of iso-l-cytochrome c and similar to those reported for heme peptides of cytochrome c. If only one or no thioether bond were formed between the two vinyl side groups of heme and the cysteine residues of apocytochrome c, all these alpha and beta bands would have shifted to red (Pettigrew, G. W., Leaver, J. L., Meyer, T. E., and Ryle, T. E. (1975) Biochem J. 147, 291-302). Thus, two thioether bonds appear to be formed to link heme to apocytochrome c by cytochrome c synthetase, completing information of the three-dimensional structure of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

6.
An a-type cytochrome was purified from Halobacterium halobium. The cytochrome showed an absorption spectrum similar to that of cytochrome aa3; it showed absorption peaks at 420 and 598 nm in the resting state, peaks at 441 and 602 nm in the reduced form, and its CO compound showed peaks at 430 and 600 nm. The cytochrome molecule was composed of only one kind of polypeptide with the molecular weight of 40,000. The cytochrome contained two heme a molecules in the molecule but no copper. The cytochrome did not show cytochrome c oxidase activity. Midpoint redox potential at pH 8.0 of the cytochrome was determined to be +0.31 V. The amino acid composition of the cytochrome resembled that of subunit I of mitochondrial cytochrome aa3. While two molecules of heme a were reduced with sodium dithionite, only one of two heme a molecules was reduced with ascorbate plus TMPD. The heme a reduced with ascorbate plus TMPD did not react with molecular oxygen or carbon monoxide, while one of two heme a molecules reduced with sodium dithionite was oxidized by molecular oxygen and combined with carbon monoxide.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
M R Mauk  A G Mauk  P C Weber  J B Matthew 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):7085-7091
The stability of the complex formed between cytochrome c and dimethyl ester heme substituted cytochrome b5 (DME-cytochrome b5) has been determined under a variety of experimental conditions to evaluate the role of the cytochrome b5 heme propionate groups in the interaction of the two native proteins. Interaction between cytochrome c and the modified cytochrome b5 was found to produce a difference spectrum in the visible range that is very similar to that generated by the interaction of the native proteins and that can be used to monitor complex formation between the two proteins. At pH 8 [25 degrees C (HEPPS), I = 5 mM], DME-cytochrome b5 and cytochrome c form a 1:1 complex with an association constant KA of 3 (1) X 10(6) M-1. This pH is the optimal pH for complex formation between these two proteins and is significantly higher than that observed for the interaction between the two native proteins. The stability of the complex formed between DME-cytochrome b5 and cytochrome c is strongly dependent on ionic strength with KA ranging from 2.4 X 10(7) M-1 at I = 1 mM to 8.2 X 10(4) M-1 at I = 13 mM [pH 8.0 (HEPPS), 25 degrees C]. Calculations for the native, trypsin-solubilized form of cytochrome b5 and cytochrome c confirm that the intermolecular complex proposed by Salemme [Salemme, F. R. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 102, 563] describes the protein-protein orientation that is electrostatically favored at neutral pH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The kinetics of reduction of Chromatium vinosum flavocytochrome c heme subunit by exogenous flavin neutral semiquinones generated by laser flash photolysis have been investigated. Unlike the holoprotein, the isolated heme subunit was appreciably reactive with lumiflavin neutral semiquinone. The measured rate constant for the reaction (2.7 X 10(7) M-1 S-1) was comparable to those of c-type cytochromes having similar redox potentials. The ionic strength dependence of the reaction with FMN neutral radical indicated that the heme subunit had a small negative charge at the site of reduction. Taken together, these results suggest that the active site of the heme subunit is buried on complexation with the flavin subunit in the holoprotein. Horse cytochrome c formed a strong complex with Chromatium, but not Chlorobium, flavocytochrome c. Possible physiological electron acceptors such as HiPIP, cytochrome c', and cytochrome c-555 apparently did not bind to the flavocytochromes c. The rate constant for reduction by lumiflavin radical of horse cytochrome c complexed to flavocytochrome c was about twofold smaller than for reduction of horse cytochrome c alone. Flavocytochrome c was itself unreactive with exogenous flavin semiquinones. The ionic strength dependence of the reduction of the complex by FMN radical was also smaller than for horse cytochrome c in the absence of flavocytochrome c. Sulfite, which forms an adduct with the protein-bound FAD (FAD is bound in an 8-alpha-S-cysteinyl linkage), did not affect the reduction of horse cytochrome c in its complex with flavocytochrome c. We conclude that horse cytochrome c is reduced directly by exogenous flavins in its complex with flavocytochrome c, although the kinetics are slightly modified. These results are not unlike observations made with complexes of mitochondrial cytochrome c with cytochrome oxidase or cytochrome b5.  相似文献   

10.
The interactions of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c from bovine cardiac mitochondria were investigated. Cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c formed a 1:1 molecular complex in aqueous solutions of low ionic strength. The complex was stable to Sephadex G-75 chromatography. The formation and stability of the complex were independent of the oxidation state of the cytochrome components as far as those reactions studied were concerned. The complex was dissociated in solutions of ionic strength higher than 0.07 or pH exceeding 10 and only partially dissociated in 8 M urea. No complexation occurred when cytochrome c was acetylated on 64% of its lysine residues or photooxidized on its 2 methionine residues. Complexes with molecular ratios of less than 1:1 (i.e. more cytochrome c) were obtained when polymerized cytochrome c, or cytochrome c with all lysine residues guanidinated, or a "1-65 heme peptide" from cyanogen bromide cleavage of cytochrome c was used. These results were interpreted to imply that the complex was predominantly maintained by ionic interactions probably involving some of the lysine residues of cytochrome c but with major stabilization dependent on the native conformations of both cytochromes. The reduced complex was autooxidizable with biphasic kinetics with first order rate constants of 6 X 10(-5) and 5 X U0(-5) s-1 but did not react with carbon monoxide. The complex reacted with cyanide and was reduced by ascorbate at about 32% and 40% respectively, of the rates of reaction with cytochrome c alone. The complex was less photoreducible than cytochrome c1 alone. The complex exhibited remarkably different circular dichroic behavior from that of the summation of cytochrome c1 plus cytochrome c. We concluded that when cytochromes c1 and c interacted they underwent dramatic conformational changes resulting in weakening of their heme crevices. All results available would indicate that in the complex cytochrome c1 was bound at the entrance to the heme crevice of cytochrome c on the methionine-80 side of the heme crevice.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c1 forms an active complex with cytochrome c as previously reported (Chiang, Y. L., Kaminsky, L. S., and King, T. E. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 29-36). It also forms a complex with cytochrome oxidase with heme ratio of 1:1. This cytochrome c1.oxidase complex has been purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation and is stable in media of high ionic strength (greater than 0.1 M) but dissociates as the pH deviates from neutral. The purified cytochrome c1 aggregates to an oligomer, presumably a pentamer. No agent has been found to depolymerize isolated c1 without denaturation. However, in the cytochrome c1.oxidase complex, these two cytochromes apparently were depolymerized to form smaller aggregates, if not monomeric units, as judged by sedimentation behavior. Cytochrome c1 also forms a ternary complex with cytochrome c and oxidase in the heme ratio of 1:1:1. This complex can be prepared by any of the following four methods: (i) c1 + c + oxidase: (ii) c1.c complex + oxidase; (iii) c1 + c.oxidase complex: or (iv) c + c1.oxidase complex. The mode of formation of these complexes is all from pure protein-protein interactions. Cytochrome c1 is also incorporated into phospholipid vesicles and these vesicles show about 200 molecules of phospholipid/cytochrome c1 in terms of heme. The spectrophotometric, circular dichroic, sedimentation behavior and enzymic properties of these complexes have been investigated.  相似文献   

12.
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase was labeled at a single sulfhydryl group by treatment with 5 mM N-iodoacetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (1,5-I-AEDANS) at pH 8.0 for 4 h. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis revealed that the enzyme was exclusively labeled at subunit III, presumably at Cys-115. The high affinity phase of the electron transfer reaction with horse cytochrome c was not affected by acetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (AEDANS) labeling. Addition of horse cytochrome c to dimeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase resulted in a 55% decrease in the AEDANS fluorescence due to the formation of a 1:1 complex between the two proteins. Forster energy transfer calculations indicated that the distance from the AEDANS label on subunit III to the heme group of cytochrome c was in the range 26-40 A. In contrast to the results with the dimeric enzyme, the fluorescence of monomeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase was not quenched at all by binding horse heart cytochrome c, indicating that the AEDANS label on subunit III was at least 54 A from the heme group of cytochrome c. These results support a model in which the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of cytochrome c interact with carboxylates on subunit II of one monomer of the cytochrome c oxidase dimer and the back of the molecule is close to subunit III on the other monomer. In order to identify the cysteine residues that ligand copper A, a new procedure was developed to specifically remove copper A from cytochrome c oxidase by incubation with 2-mercaptoethanol followed by gel chromatography. Treatment of the copper A-depleted cytochrome c oxidase preparation with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling sulfhydryl groups on subunit II as well as on subunit III. No additional subunits were labeled. This result indicates that the copper A binding site is located at cysteines 196 and/or 200 of subunit II and that removal of copper A exposes these residues for labeling by 1,5-I-AEDANS. Alternative copper A depletion methods involving incubation with bathocuproine sulfonate (Weintraub, S.T., and Wharton, D.C. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1669-1676) or p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate (Li, P.M., Gelles, J., Chan, S.I., Sullivan, R.J., and Scott, R.A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2091-2095) were also investigated. Treatment of these preparations with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling cysteine residues on subunits II and III. However, additional sulfhydryl residues on other subunits were also labeled, preventing a definitive assignment of the location of copper A using these depletion procedures.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by hydrogen peroxide produces a unique enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I, in which the ferric heme iron has been oxidized to an oxyferryl state, Fe(IV), and an amino acid residue has been oxidized to a radical state. The reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I by horse heart ferrocytochrome c is biphasic in the presence of excess ferrocytochrome c as cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I is reduced to the native enzyme via a second enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II. In the first phase of the reaction, the oxyferryl heme iron in Compound I is reduced to the ferric state producing Compound II which retains the amino acid free radical. The pseudo-first order rate constant for reduction of Compound I to Compound II increases with increasing cytochrome c concentration in a hyperbolic fashion. The limiting value at infinite cytochrome c concentration, which is attributed to the intracomplex electron transfer rate from ferrocytochrome c to the heme site in Compound I, is 450 +/- 20 s-1 at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Ferricytochrome c inhibits the reaction in a competitive manner. The reduction of the free radical in Compound II is complex. At low cytochrome c peroxidase concentrations, the reduction rate is 5 +/- 3 s-1, independent of the ferrocytochrome c concentration. At higher peroxidase concentrations, a term proportional to the square of the Compound II concentration is involved in the reduction of the free radical. Reduction of Compound II is not inhibited by ferricytochrome c. The rates and equilibrium constant for the interconversion of the free radical and oxyferryl forms of Compound II have also been determined.  相似文献   

14.
The autoxidizability of beef heart cytochrome c1 was investigated in terms of the integrity of the binding of the hinge protein to the heme subunit. Cytochrome c1 was isolated as a subcomplex consisting of the heme subunit and the hinge protein. Treatment of the cytochrome c1 subcomplex with p-chloromercuribenzoate (pCMB) under mild conditions lessened the binding strength between the two subunits. They were dissociated on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) under nondenaturing conditions, but were not separated by gel filtration chromatography. The pCMB-treated subcomplex had a slight autoxidizability. This was repressed to the level of the native subcomplex, when the mercurial compound bound to the subcomplex was removed by the addition of 2-mercaptoethanol. Concomitantly, the less stable binding between the subunits was apparently reversed to the native state. After pCMB treatment of the subcomplex, the heme subunit recovered from PAGE showed marked autoxidizability, even if it was treated with 2-mercaptoethanol. Addition of cholate repressed the autoxidizability of the heme subunit after the removal of the mercurial compound. These results confirmed that the stable binding of the hinge protein to the heme subunit was essential for the nonautoxidizability of cytochrome c1 subcomplex. In addition, it was suggested that cysteinyl residues in the subcomplex must be involved to a great extent in the stable binding between the two subunits.  相似文献   

15.
The heme iron coordination of unfolded ferric and ferrous cytochrome c in the presence of 7-9 M urea at different pH values has been probed by several spectroscopic techniques including magnetic and natural circular dichroism (CD), electrochemistry, UV-visible (UV-vis) absorption and resonance Raman (RR). In 7-9 M urea at neutral pH, ferric cytochrome c is found to be predominantly a low spin bis-His-ligated heme center. In acidic 9 M urea solutions the UV-vis and near-infrared (NIR) magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) measurements have for the first time revealed the formation of a high spin His/H(2)O complex. The pK(a) for the neutral to acidic conversion is 5.2. In 9 M urea, ferrous cytochrome c is shown to retain its native ligation structure at pH 7. Formation of a five-coordinate high spin complex in equilibrium with the native form of ferrous cytochrome c takes place below the pK(a) 4.8. The formal redox potential of the His/H(2)O complex of cytochrome c in 9 M urea at pH 3 was estimated to be -0.13 V, ca. 100 mV more positive than E degrees ' estimated for the bis-His complex of cytochrome c in urea solution at pH 7.  相似文献   

16.
To study the functional significance of the unusual bimetallic Cu(A) center of cytochrome c oxidase, the direct ligands of the Cu(A) center in subunit II of the holoenzyme were mutated. Two of the mutant forms, M263L and H260N, exhibit major changes in activity (10% and 1% of wild-type, respectively) and in near-infrared and EPR spectra, but metal analysis shows that both mutants retain two coppers in the Cu(A) center and both retain proton pumping activity. In M263L, multifrequency EPR studies indicate the coppers are still electronically coupled, while all the other metal centers in M263L appear unchanged, by visible, EPR, and FTIR spectroscopy. Nevertheless, heme a3 is very slow to reduce with cytochrome c or dithionite under stopped-flow and steady-state conditions. This effect appears to be secondary to the change in redox equilibrium between Cu(A) and heme a. The studies reported here and in Wang et al. [Wang, K., Geren, L., Zhen, Y., Ma, L., Ferguson-Miller, S., Durham, B., and Millett, F. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 2298-2304] demonstrate that altering the ligands of Cu(A) can influence the rate and equilibrium of electron transfer between Cu(A) and heme a, but that the native ligation state is not essential for proton pumping.  相似文献   

17.
The cytochrome c(1) subunit of the ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc(1) complex) contains a single heme group covalently attached to the polypeptide via thioether bonds of two conserved cysteine residues. In the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter (Rba.) capsulatus, cytochrome c(1) contains two additional cysteines, C144 and C167. Site-directed mutagenesis reveals a disulfide bond (rare in monoheme c-type cytochromes) anchoring C144 to C167, which is in the middle of an 18 amino acid loop that is present in some bacterial cytochromes c(1) but absent in higher organisms. Both single and double Cys to Ala substitutions drastically lower the +320 mV redox potential of the native form to below 0 mV, yielding nonfunctional cytochrome bc(1). In sharp contrast to the native protein, mutant cytochrome c(1) binds carbon monoxide (CO) in the reduced form, indicating an opening of the heme environment that is correlated with the drop in potential. In revertants, loss of the disulfide bond is remediated uniquely by insertion of a beta-branched amino acid two residues away from the heme-ligating methionine 183, identifying the pattern betaXM, naturally common in many other high-potential cytochromes c. Despite the unrepaired disulfide bond, the betaXM revertants are no longer vulnerable to CO binding and restore function by raising the redox potential to +227 mV, which is remarkably close to the value of the betaXM containing but loop-free mitochondrial cytochrome c(1). The disulfide anchored loop and betaXM motifs appear to be two independent but nonadditive strategies to control the integrity of the heme-binding pocket and raise cytochrome c midpoint potentials.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of flavin semiquinone reduction of the components of the 1:1 complex formed by cytochrome c with either cytochrome b5 or a derivative of cytochrome b5 in which the heme propionates are esterified (DME-cytochrome b5) have been studied. The rate constant for the reduction of horse heart cytochrome c by the electrostatically neutral lumiflavin semiquinone (LfH) is unaffected by complexation with native cytochrome b5 at pH 7. However, complex formation with DME-cytochrome b5 (pH 7) decreases by 35% the rate constant for cytochrome c reduction by LfH. At pH 8, complex formation with native cytochrome b5 decreases the rate constant for cytochrome c reduction by LfH markedly, whereas the rate constant for cytochrome c reduction, either unbound or in the complex formed with DME-cytochrome b5, is increased 2-fold relative to pH 7. These results indicate that the accessibility of the cytochrome c heme is not the same in the complexes formed with the two cytochrome b5 derivatives and that the docking geometry of the complex formed by the two native cytochromes is pH dependent. Binding of horse heart and tuna cytochromes c to native and DME-cytochromes b5 decreases the rate constants for reduction of cytochrome c by the negatively charged flavin mononucleotide semiquinone (FMNH) by approximately 30% and approximately 40%, respectively. This finding is attributed to substantial neutralization of the positive electrostatic potential surface of cytochrome c that occurs when it binds to either form of cytochrome b5.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The reaction between cytochrome c (Cc) and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied using a cytochrome c derivative labeled with ruthenium trisbipyridine at lysine 55 (Ru-55-Cc). Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between Ru-55-Cc and CcO at low ionic strength results in electron transfer from photoreduced heme c to Cu(A) with an intracomplex rate constant of k(a) = 4 x 10(4) s(-1), followed by electron transfer from Cu(A) to heme a with a rate constant of k(b) = 9 x 10(4) s(-1). The effects of CcO surface mutations on the kinetics follow the order D214N > E157Q > E148Q > D195N > D151N/E152Q approximately D188N/E189Q approximately wild type, indicating that the acidic residues Asp(214), Glu(157), Glu(148), and Asp(195) on subunit II interact electrostatically with the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of Cc. Mutating the highly conserved tryptophan residue, Trp(143), to Phe or Ala decreased the intracomplex electron transfer rate constant k(a) by 450- and 1200-fold, respectively, without affecting the dissociation constant K(D). It therefore appears that the indole ring of Trp(143) mediates electron transfer from the heme group of Cc to Cu(A). These results are consistent with steady-state kinetic results (Zhen, Y., Hoganson, C. W., Babcock, G. T., and Ferguson-Miller, S. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38032-38041) and a computational docking analysis (Roberts, V. A., and Pique, M. E. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38051-38060).  相似文献   

20.
The complete amino acid sequence of the 86-residue heme subunit of flavocytochrome c (sulfide dehydrogenase) from the green phototrophic bacterium Chlorobium thiosulfatophilum strain Tassajara has been determined as follows: APEQSKSIPRGEILSLSCAGCHGTDGKSESIIPTIYGRSAEYIESALLDFKSGA- RPSTVMGRHAKGYSDEEIHQIAEYFGSLSTMNN. The subunit has a single heme-binding site near the N terminus, consisting of a pair of cysteine residues at positions 18 and 21. The out-of-plane ligands are apparently contributed by histidine 22 and methionine 60. The molecular weight including heme is 10,014. The heme subunit is apparently homologous to small cytochromes c by virtue of the location of the heme-binding site and its extraplanar ligands. However, the amino acid sequence is closer to Paracoccus sp. cytochrome c554(548) (37%) than it is to the heme subunit from Pseudomonas putida p-cresol methylhydroxylase flavocytochrome c (20%). The flavocytochrome c heme subunit is only 14% similar to the small cytochrome c555 also found in Chlorobium. Secondary structure predictions suggest N- and C-terminal helices as expected, but the midsection of the protein probably folds somewhat differently from the small cytochromes of known three-dimensional structure such as Pseudomonas cytochrome c551. Analyses of the residues near the exposed heme edges of the cytochrome subunits of P. putida and C. thiosulfatophilum flavocytochromes c (assuming homology to proteins of known structure) indicate that charged residues are not conserved, suggesting that electrostatic interactions are not involved in the association of the heme and flavin subunits. The N-terminal sequence of the flavoprotein subunit of flavocytochrome has also been determined. It shows no similarity to the comparable region of the p-cresol methylhydroxylase flavoprotein subunit from P. putida. The flavin-binding hexapeptide, isolated and sequenced earlier (Kenney, W. C., McIntire, W., and Yamanaka, T. (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 483, 467-474), is situated at positions 40-46.  相似文献   

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