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1.
Energy transduction in the cytochrome bc(1) complex is achieved by catalyzing opposite oxido-reduction reactions at two different quinone binding sites. We have determined the pre-steady state kinetics of cytochrome b and c(1) reduction at varying quinol/quinone ratios in the isolated yeast bc(1) complex to investigate the mechanisms that minimize inhibition of quinol oxidation at center P by reduction of the b(H) heme through center N. The faster rate of initial cytochrome b reduction as well as its lower sensitivity to quinone concentrations with respect to cytochrome c(1) reduction indicated that the b(H) hemes equilibrated with the quinone pool through center N before significant catalysis at center P occurred. The extent of this initial cytochrome b reduction corresponded to a level of b(H) heme reduction of 33%-55% depending on the quinol/quinone ratio. The extent of initial cytochrome c(1) reduction remained constant as long as the fast electron equilibration through center N reduced no more than 50% of the b(H) hemes. Using kinetic modeling, the resilience of center P catalysis to inhibition caused by partial pre-reduction of the b(H) hemes was explained using kinetics in terms of the dimeric structure of the bc(1) complex which allows electrons to equilibrate between monomers.  相似文献   

2.
Aspects of the crystal structures of the hetero-oligomeric cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f ("bc") complexes relevant to their electron/proton transfer function and the associated redox reactions of the lipophilic quinones are discussed. Differences between the b(6)f and bc(1) complexes are emphasized. The cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f dimeric complexes diverge in structure from a core of subunits that coordinate redox groups consisting of two bis-histidine coordinated hemes, a heme b(n) and b(p) on the electrochemically negative (n) and positive (p) sides of the complex, the high potential [2Fe-2S] cluster and c-type heme at the p-side aqueous interface and aqueous phase, respectively, and quinone/quinol binding sites on the n- and p-sides of the complex. The bc(1) and b(6)f complexes diverge in subunit composition and structure away from this core. b(6)f Also contains additional prosthetic groups including a c-type heme c(n) on the n-side, and a chlorophyll a and β-carotene. Common structure aspects; functions of the symmetric dimer. (I) Quinone exchange with the bilayer. An inter-monomer protein-free cavity of approximately 30? along the membrane normal×25? (central inter-monomer distance)×15? (depth in the center), is common to both bc(1) and b(6)f complexes, providing a niche in which the lipophilic quinone/quinol (Q/QH(2)) can be exchanged with the membrane bilayer. (II) Electron transfer. The dimeric structure and the proximity of the two hemes b(p) on the electrochemically positive side of the complex in the two monomer units allow the possibility of two alternate routes of electron transfer across the complex from heme b(p) to b(n): intra-monomer and inter-monomer involving electron cross-over between the two hemes b(p). A structure-based summary of inter-heme distances in seven bc complexes, representing mitochondrial, chromatophore, cyanobacterial, and algal sources, indicates that, based on the distance parameter, the intra-monomer pathway would be favored kinetically. (III) Separation of quinone binding sites. A consequence of the dimer structure and the position of the Q/QH(2) binding sites is that the p-side QH(2) oxidation and n-side Q reduction sites are each well separated. Therefore, in the event of an overlap in residence time by QH(2) or Q molecules at the two oxidation or reduction sites, their spatial separation would result in minimal steric interference between extended Q or QH(2) isoprenoid chains. (IV) Trans-membrane QH(2)/Q transfer. (i) n/p-side QH(2)/Q transfer may be hindered by lipid acyl chains; (ii) the shorter less hindered inter-monomer pathway across the complex would not pass through the center of the cavity, as inferred from the n-side antimycin site on one monomer and the p-side stigmatellin site on the other residing on the same surface of the complex. (V) Narrow p-side portal for QH(2)/Q passage. The [2Fe-2S] cluster that serves as oxidant, and whose histidine ligand serves as a H(+) acceptor in the oxidation of QH(2), is connected to the inter-monomer cavity by a narrow extended portal, which is also occupied in the b(6)f complex by the 20 carbon phytyl chain of the bound chlorophyll.  相似文献   

3.
We have obtained evidence for electron transfer between cytochrome b subunits of the yeast bc(1) complex dimer by analyzing pre-steady state reduction of cytochrome b in the presence of center P inhibitors. The kinetics and extent of cytochrome b reduced by quinol in the presence of variable concentrations of antimycin decreased non-linearly and could only be fitted to a model in which electrons entering through one center N can equilibrate between the two cytochrome b subunits of the bc(1) complex dimer. The b(H) heme absorbance in a bc(1) complex inhibited at center P and preincubated with substoichiometric concentrations of antimycin showed a red shift upon the addition of substrate, which indicates that electrons from the uninhibited center N in one monomer are able to reach the b(H) heme at the antimycin-blocked site in the other. The extent of cytochrome b reduction by variable concentrations of menaquinol could only be fitted to a kinetic model that assumes electron equilibration between center N sites in the dimer. Kinetic simulations showed that non-rate-limiting electron equilibration between the two b(H) hemes in the dimer through the two b(L) hemes is possible upon reduction through one center N despite the thermodynamically unfavorable b(H) to b(L) electron transfer step. We propose that electron transfer between cytochrome b subunits minimizes the formation of semiquinone-ferrocytochrome b(H) complexes at center N and favors ubiquinol oxidation at center P by increasing the amount of oxidized cytochrome b.  相似文献   

4.
Structural analysis of the dimeric mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex suggests that electron transfer between inter-monomer hemes bL-bL may occur during bc1 catalysis. Such electron transfer may be facilitated by the aromatic pairs present between the two bL hemes in the two symmetry-related monomers. To test this hypothesis, R. sphaeroides mutants expressing His6-tagged bc1 complexes with mutations at three aromatic residues (Phe-195, Tyr-199, and Phe-203), located between two bL hemes, were generated and characterized. All three mutants grew photosynthetically at a rate comparable to that of wild-type cells. The bc1 complexes prepared from mutants F195A, Y199A, and F203A have, respectively, 78%, 100%, and 100% of ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity found in the wild-type complex. Replacing the Phe-195 of cytochrome b with Tyr, His, or Trp results in mutant complexes (F195Y, F195H, or F195W) having the same ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity as the wild-type. These results indicate that the aromatic group at position195 of cytochrome b is involved in electron transfer reactions of the bc1 complex. The rate of superoxide anion (O2*) generation, measured by the chemiluminescence of 2-methyl-6-(p-methoxyphenyl)-3,7-dihydroimidazo[1,2-alpha]pyrazin-3-one hydrochloride-O2* adduct during oxidation of ubiquinol, is 3 times higher in the F195A complex than in the wild-type or mutant complexes Y199A or F203A. This supports the idea that the interruption of electron transfer between the two bL hemes enhances electron leakage to oxygen and thus decreases the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the interaction between monomers of the dimeric yeast cytochrome bc(1) complex by analyzing the pre-steady and steady state activities of the isolated enzyme in the presence of antimycin under conditions that allow the first turnover of ubiquinol oxidation to be observable in cytochrome c(1) reduction. At pH 8.8, where the redox potential of the iron-sulfur protein is approximately 200 mV and in a bc(1) complex with a mutated iron-sulfur protein of equally low redox potential, the amount of cytochrome c(1) reduced by several equivalents of decyl-ubiquinol in the presence of antimycin corresponded to only half of that present in the bc(1) complex. Similar experiments in the presence of several equivalents of cytochrome c also showed only half of the bc(1) complex participating in quinol oxidation. The extent of cytochrome b reduced corresponded to two b(H) hemes undergoing reduction through one center P per dimer, indicating electron transfer between the two cytochrome b subunits. Antimycin stimulated the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity of the bc(1) complex at low inhibitor/enzyme ratios. This stimulation could only be fitted to a model in which half of the bc(1) dimer is inactive when both center N sites are free, becoming active upon binding of one center N inhibitor molecule per dimer, and there is electron transfer between the cytochrome b subunits of the dimer. These results are consistent with an alternating half-of-the-sites mechanism of ubiquinol oxidation in the bc(1) complex dimer.  相似文献   

6.
In this work, the genes for cytochrome aa3 oxidase and the cytochrome bc1 complex in the gram-positive soil bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum were identified. The monocistronic ctaD gene encoded a 65-kDa protein with all features typical for subunit I of cytochrome aa3 oxidases. A ctaD deletion mutant lacked the characteristic 600 nm peak in redox difference spectra, and growth in glucose minimal medium was strongly impaired. The genes encoding subunit III of cytochrome aa3 (ctaE) and the three characteristic subunits of the cytochrome bc1 complex (qcrABC) were clustered in the order ctaE-qcrCAB. Analysis of the deduced primary structures revealed a number of unusual features: (1) cytochrome c1 (QcrC, 30 kDa) contained two Cys-X-X-Cys-His motifs for covalent heme attachment, indicating that it is a diheme c-type cytochrome; (2) the 'Rieske' iron-sulphur protein (QcrA, 45 kDa) contained three putative transmembrane helices in the N-terminal region rather than only one; and (3) cytochrome b (QcrB, 60 kDa) contained, in addition to the conserved part with eight transmembrane helices, a C-terminal extension of about 120 amino acids, which presumably is located in the cytoplasm. Staining of C. glutamicum proteins for covalently bound heme indicated the presence of a single, membrane-bound c-type cytochrome with an apparent molecular mass of about 31 kDa. Since this protein was missing in a qcrCAB deletion mutant, it most likely corresponds to cytochrome c1. Similar to the deltactaD mutant, the deltaqcrCAB mutant showed strongly impaired growth in glucose minimal medium, which indicates that the bc1-aa3 pathway is the main route of respiration under these conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The aerobic respiratory chain of the Gram-positive Corynebacterium glutamicum involves a bc(1) complex with a diheme cytochrome c(1) and a cytochrome aa(3) oxidase but no additional c-type cytochromes. Here we show that the two enzymes form a supercomplex, because affinity chromatography of either strep-tagged cytochrome b (QcrB) or strep-tagged subunit I (CtaD) of cytochrome aa(3) always resulted in the copurification of the subunits of the bc(1) complex (QcrA, QcrB, QcrC) and the aa(3) complex (CtaD, CtaC, CtaE). The isolated bc(1)-aa(3) supercomplexes had quinol oxidase activity, indicating functional electron transfer between cytochrome c(1) and the Cu(A) center of cytochrome aa(3). Besides the known bc(1) and aa(3) subunits, few additional proteins were copurified, one of which (CtaF) was identified as a fourth subunit of cytochrome aa(3). If either of the two CXXCH motifs for covalent heme attachment in cytochrome c(1) was changed to SXXSH, the resulting mutants showed severe growth defects, had no detectable c-type cytochrome, and their cytochrome b level was strongly reduced. This indicates that the attachment of both heme groups to apo-cytochrome c(1) is not only required for the activity but also for the assembly and/or stability of the bc(1) complex.  相似文献   

8.
Heliobacteria have a Rieske/cytochrome b complex composed of a Rieske protein, a cytochrome b(6,) a subunit IV and a di-heme cytochrome c. The overall structure of the complex seems close to the b(6)f complex from cyanobacteria and chloroplasts to the exception of the di-heme cytochrome. We show here by biochemical and biophysical studies that a heme c(i) is covalently attached to the Rieske/cytochrome b complex from Heliobacteria. We studied the EPR signature of this heme in two different species, Heliobacterium modesticaldum and Heliobacillus mobilis. In contrast to the case of b(6)f complex, a strong axial ligand to the heme is present, most probably a protonatable amino acid residue.  相似文献   

9.
The redox components of the cytochrome bc1 complex from the acidophilic chemolithotrophic organism Thiobacillus ferrooxidans were investigated by potentiometric and spectroscopic techniques. Optical redox titrations demonstrated the presence of two b-type hemes with differing redox midpoint potentials at pH 7.4 (-169 and + 20 mV for bL and bH, respectively). At pH 3.5, by contrast, both hemes appeared to titrate at about +20 mV. Antimycin A, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide, and stigmatellin induced distinguishable shifts of the b hemes' alpha-bands, providing evidence for the binding of antimycin A and 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide near heme bH (located on the cytosolic side of the membrane) and of stigmatellin near heme bL (located on the periplasmic side of the membrane). The inhibitors stigmatellin, 5-(n-undecyl)-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole, and 2, 5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone affected the EPR spectrum of the Rieske iron-sulfur center in a way that differs from what has been observed for cytochrome bc1 or b6f complexes. The results obtained demonstrate that the T. ferrooxidans complex, although showing most of the features characteristic for bc1 complexes, contains unique properties that are most probably related to the chemolithotrophicity and/or acidophilicity of its parent organism. A speculative model for reverse electron transfer through the T. ferrooxidans complex is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
Soret-excited resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the spinach cytochrome b6f complex (cyt b6f) are reported for the oxidized, native, ascorbate-reduced, and dithionite-reduced forms. Using excitations at 441.6, 413.1, and 406.7 nm, RR contributions of chlorophyll a, beta-carotene, the c-type heme of cytochrome f, and the b-type hemes of cytochrome b6 of the b6f complex were identified and the data compared to those previously obtained for the Rhodospirillum rubrum bc1 complex [Le Moigne, C., Schoepp, B., Othman, S., Verméglio, A., and Desbois, A. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 1066-1076]. RR bands arising from the b(6)f-associated chlorophyll a and beta-carotene pigments were found to be particularly intense in the spectra excited at 441.6 nm. The frequencies of the phorbin skeleton of chlorophyll a at 1606, 1552, and 1525 cm(-1) are typical of a Mg atom with a single axial ligand. Strong RR bands corresponding to stretching or deformation modes of beta-carotene were detected at 1137, 1157, 1191, 1216, and 1531 cm(-1) in the different forms of cyt b6f. This set of frequencies is assigned to an all-trans configuration of the polyene chain. The redox titrations of the b(6)f complex allow the characterization of RR bands of the three hemes. The nu10, nu2, nu3, and nu8 modes of reduced cyt f are detected at 1619, 1591, 1492, and 356 cm(-1), respectively. From this set of frequencies, one can conclude that the particular histidine/amine heme coordination found in the truncated soluble domain of cyt f is a specific feature of the entire cyt f included in the b6f complex. The frequencies of the nu2, nu8, and nu10 marker modes are consistent with different conformations for the two b-type hemes of cyt b6f. One of these hemes is strongly distorted (nu2, nu8, and nu10 at 1581, 351, and 1610 cm(-1), respectively), while the other one is planar (1586, 345, and 1618 cm(-1), respectively). Largely different structures for the b-type hemes appear to be a common property for the bc1/b6f complexes.  相似文献   

11.
Through pattern matching of the cytochrome c heme-binding site (CXXCH) against the genome sequence of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, we identified 42 possible cytochrome c genes (27 of which should be soluble) out of a total of 4758. However, we found only six soluble cytochromes c in extracts of S. oneidensis grown under several different conditions: (1) a small tetraheme cytochrome c, (2) a tetraheme flavocytochrome c-fumarate reductase, (3) a diheme cytochrome c4, (4) a monoheme cytochrome c5, (5) a monoheme cytochrome c', and (6) a diheme bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase. These cytochromes were identified either through N-terminal or complete amino acid sequence determination combined with mass spectroscopy. All six cytochromes were about 10-fold more abundant when cells were grown at low than at high aeration, whereas the flavocytochrome c-fumarate reductase was specifically induced by anaerobic growth on fumarate. When adjusted for the different heme content, the monoheme cytochrome c5 is as abundant as are the small tetraheme cytochrome and the tetraheme fumarate reductase. Published results on regulation of cytochromes from DNA microarrays and 2D-PAGE differ somewhat from our results, emphasizing the importance of multifaceted analyses in proteomics.  相似文献   

12.
Cen X  Yu L  Yu CA 《FEBS letters》2008,582(4):523-526
The key step of the "protonmotive Q-cycle" mechanism for cytochrome bc1 complex is the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol at the Qp site. ISP is reduced when its head domain is at the b-position and subsequent move to the c1 position, to reduce cytochrome c1, upon protein conformational changes caused by the electron transfer from cytochrome b(L) to b(H). Results of analyses of the inhibitory efficacy and the binding affinity, determined by isothermal titration calorimetry, of Pm and Pf, on different redox states of cytochrome bc1 complexes, confirm this speculation. Pm inhibitor has a higher affinity and better efficacy with the cytochrome b(H) reduced complex and Pf binds better and has a higher efficacy with the ISP reduced complex.  相似文献   

13.
Cytochrome f from the photosynthetic cytochrome b(6)f complex is unique among c-type cytochromes in its fold and heme ligation. The 1. 9-A crystal structure of the functional, extrinsic portion of cytochrome f from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum demonstrates that an unusual buried chain of five water molecules is remarkably conserved throughout the biological range of cytochrome f from cyanobacteria to plants [Martinez et al. (1994) Structure 2, 95-105]. Structure and sequence conservation of the cytochrome f extrinsic portion is concentrated at the heme, in the buried water chain, and in the vicinity of the transmembrane helix anchor. The electrostatic surface potential is variable, so that the surface of P. laminosum cytochrome f is much more acidic than that from turnip. Cytochrome f is unrelated to cytochrome c(1), its functional analogue in the mitochondrial respiratory cytochrome bc(1) complex, although other components of the b(6)f and bc(1) complexes are homologous. Identical function of the two complexes is inferred for events taking place at sites of strong sequence conservation. Conserved sites throughout the entire cytochrome b(6)f/bc(1) family include the cluster-binding domain of the Rieske protein and the heme b and quinone-binding sites on the electrochemically positive side of the membrane within the b cytochrome, but not the putative quinone-binding site on the electrochemically negative side.  相似文献   

14.
To characterize a diheme cytochrome c4 of unknown functional of the Vibrio genus for the first time, the Vibrio parahaemolyticus cytochrome c4 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli periplasm using the endogenous signal sequence. The physicochemical properties of the purified recombinant protein, viz., molecular mass, UV/Vis, and CD spectra, and the redox potentials of the N- and C-terminal domain hemes were determined.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: The cytochrome bc(1) complex is part of the energy conversion machinery of the respiratory and photosynthetic electron transfer chains. This integral membrane protein complex catalyzes electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c. It couples the electron transfer to the electrogenic translocation of protons across the membrane via a so-called Q cycle mechanism. RESULTS: The cytochrome bc(1) complex from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was crystallized together with a bound antibody Fv fragment. The structure was determined at 2.3 A resolution using multiple isomorphous replacement, and refined to a crystallographic R factor of 22.2% (R(free) = 25.4%). The complex is present as a homodimer. Each 'monomer' of the refined model includes 2178 amino acid residues of subunits COR1, QCR2, COB, CYT1, RIP1, QCR6, QCR7, QCR8 and QCR9 of the cytochrome bc(1) complex and of the polypeptides V(H) and V(L) of the Fv fragment, the cofactors heme b(H), heme b(L), heme c(1), the [2Fe-2S] cluster and 346 water molecules. The Fv fragment binds to the extrinsic domain of the [2Fe-2S] Rieske protein and is essential for formation of the crystal lattice. CONCLUSIONS: The approach to crystallize membrane proteins as complexes with specific antibody fragments appears to be of general importance. The structure of the yeast cytochrome bc(1) complex reveals in detail the binding sites of the natural substrate coenzyme Q6 and the inhibitor stigmatellin. Buried water molecules close to the binding sites suggest possible pathways for proton uptake and release. A comparison with other cytochrome bc(1) complexes shows features that are specific to yeast.  相似文献   

16.
A cytochrome bc1 complex, essentially free of bacteriochlorophyll, has been purified from the photosynthetic purple non-sulfur bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum. The complex catalyzes electron flow from quinol to cytochrome c (turnover number = 75 s-1) that is inhibited by low concentrations of antimycin A and myxothiazol. The complex contains only three peptide subunits: cytochrome b (Mr = 35,000); cytochrome c1 (Mr = 31,000) and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (Mr = 22,400). Em values (pH 7.4) were measured for cytochrome c1 (+320 mV) and the two hemes of cytochrome b (-33 and -90 mV). Electron flow from quinol to cytochrome c is inhibited when the complex is pre-illuminated in the presence of a ubiquinone photoaffinity analog (azido-Q). During illumination, the azido-Q becomes covalently attached to the cytochrome b peptide and, to a lesser extent, to cytochrome c1.  相似文献   

17.
The cytochrome bc(1) complex from Rhodobacter capsulatus was investigated by protein electrochemistry and visible/IR spectroscopy. Infrared difference spectra, which represent redox-induced conformational changes of cofactors and their protein environments, show signals of the hemes, the quinone Q(i), and small conformational changes of the protein backbone. Furthermore, band features were tentatively assigned to protonated aspartic or glutamic acids involved in the redox transition of each of the b hemes, a proline in that of the [2Fe-2S] protein, and an arginine in that of cytochrome b(H). The midpoint potential of the [2Fe-2S] protein was determined for the first time at physiological temperature to be +290 mV at pH 8.7. The reduced minus oxidized difference extinction coefficients of the alpha-bands of the cytochromes were calculated as 11.5, 19, and 6.7 mM(-1) cm(-1) for cytochromes c(1), b(H), and b(L), respectively. A novel method has been developed to quantify protonation reactions of the complex during the redox reactions of its cofactors by evaluation of the buffer signals in the midinfrared region. Values will be discussed in relation to the pH dependence of the midpoint potentials.  相似文献   

18.
Redox transitions in a film of detergent-purified bovine cytochrome bc(1) complex were investigated by perfusion-induced attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. The technique provides a flexible method for generating redox-induced IR changes of components of bovine cytochrome bc(1) complex at a high signal:noise ratio. These IR redox difference spectra arise from perturbations of prosthetic groups and surrounding protein. Visible difference spectra were recorded synchronously using a light beam reflected from the exposed prism surface and provided a quantitative means of determining the redox transitions that were occurring. IR and visible redox difference spectra of iron-sulfur protein/cytochrome c(1), heme b(H), and heme b(L) were separated by selective reduction and/or oxidation that extends published data on the homologous bacterial enzyme. Several bands could be tentatively assigned to redox-sensitive modes of hemes and ubiquinone and changes in the surrounding protein by comparison with available data for bacterial bc(1) complex, other related heme proteins, and model compounds. Some tentative assignments of further signals to specific amino acids are made on the basis of known crystal structures.  相似文献   

19.
To elucidate the mechanism of bifurcated oxidation of quinol in the cytochrome bc1 complex, Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutants, H198N and H111N, lacking heme bL and heme bH, respectively, were constructed and characterized. Purified mutant complexes have the same subunit composition as that of the wild-type complex, but have only 9-11% of the electron transfer activity, which is sensitive to stigmatellin or myxothiazol. The Em values for hemes bL and bH in the H111N and H198N complexes are -95 and -35 mV, respectively. The pseudo first-order reduction rate constants for hemes bL and bH in H111N and H198N, by ubiquiniol, are 16.3 and 12.4 s(-1), respectively. These indicate that the Qp site in the H111N mutant complex is similar to that in the wild-type complex. Pre-steady state reduction rates of heme c1 by these two mutant complexes decrease to a similar extent of their activity, suggesting that the decrease in electron transfer activity is due to impairment of movement of the head domain of reduced iron-sulfur protein, caused by disruption of electron transfer from heme bL to heme bH. Both mutant complexes produce as much superoxide as does antimycin A-treated wild-type complex. Ascorbate eliminates all superoxide generating activity in the intact or antimycin inhibited wild-type or mutant complexes.  相似文献   

20.
The orientation of the chromophores in the cytochrome bc(1) of Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and beef heart mitochondria is reported. The combination of redox-resolved absorption spectrophotometry and linear dichroism experiments at low temperature allows the determination of the orientation of the three hemes with respect to the membrane plane. The orientations of the b(H)-and b(L)-hemes of the R. sphaeroides and beef heart mitochondrial complexes are similar to those determined by crystallographic studies of the mitochondrial cytochrome bc(1). On the other hand the orientations of the b-hemes of the R. rubrum complex lead to the conclusion that the b(H)-heme is more perpendicular to the membrane plane than the b(L)-heme. This could be explained by a specific organization of the b-hemes due to subunit composition of the complex or, alternatively, to a different spatial position of the heme transitions with respect to the porphyrin macrocycle compared with the other complexes. Moreover, our results demonstrate a different orientation of the heme c(1) of the three studied complexes in comparison to crystallographic studies. This difference may arise from the above hypothesis on the transitions of the heme or from flexibility of this subunit in function of its redox state.  相似文献   

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