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1.
Typically, simple flavoprotein oxidases couple the oxidation of their substrates with the formation of hydrogen peroxide without release of significant levels of the superoxide ion. However, two evolutionarily related single-domain sulfhydryl oxidases (Erv2p; a yeast endoplasmic reticulum resident protein and augmenter of liver regeneration, ALR, an enzyme predominantly found in the mitochondrial intermembrane) release up to ~30% of the oxygen they reduce as the superoxide ion. Both enzymes oxidize dithiol substrates via a redox-active disulfide adjacent to the flavin cofactor within the helix-rich Erv domain. Subsequent reduction of the flavin is followed by transfer of reducing equivalents to molecular oxygen. Superoxide release was initially detected using tris(3-hydroxypropyl)phosphine (THP) as an alternative reducing substrate to dithiothreitol (DTT). THP, and other phosphines, showed anomalously high turnover numbers with Erv2p and ALR in the oxygen electrode, but oxygen consumption was drastically suppressed upon the addition of superoxide dismutase. The superoxide ion initiates a radical chain reaction promoting the aerobic oxidation of phosphines with the formation of hydrogen peroxide. Use of a known flux of superoxide generated by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase system showed that one superoxide ion stimulates the reduction of 27 and 4.5 molecules of oxygen using THP and tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP), respectively. This superoxide-dependent amplification of oxygen consumption by phosphines provides a new kinetic method for the detection of superoxide. Superoxide release was also observed by a standard chemiluminescence method using a luciferin analogue (MCLA) when 2 mM DTT was employed as a substrate of Erv2p and ALR. The percentage of superoxide released from Erv2p increased to ~65% when monomeric mutants of the normally homodimeric enzyme were used. In contrast, monomeric multidomain quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase enzymes that also contain an Erv FAD-binding fold release only 1-5% of their total reduced oxygen species as the superoxide ion. Aspects of the mechanism and possible physiological significance of superoxide release from these Erv-domain flavoproteins are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of recombinant rat augmenter of liver regeneration (ALRp) has been determined to 1.8 A. The protein is a homodimer, stabilized by extensive noncovalent interactions and a network of hydrogen bonds, and possesses a noncovalently bound FAD in a motif previously found only in the related protein ERV2p. ALRp functions in vitro as a disulfide oxidase using dithiothreitol as reductant. Reduction of the flavin by DTT occurs under aerobic conditions resulting in a spectrum characteristic of a neutral semiquinone. This semiquinone is stable and is only fully reduced by addition of dithionite. Mutation of either of two cysteine residues that are located adjacent to the FAD results in inactivation of the oxidase activity. A comparison of ALRp with ERV2p is made that reveals a number of significant structural differences, which are related to the in vivo functions of these two proteins. Possible physiological roles of ALR are examined and a hypothesis that it may serve multiple roles is proposed.  相似文献   

3.
The peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase has been purified from extracts of the yeast Candida tropicalis grown with alkanes as the principal energy source. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 552,000 and a subunit molecular weight of 72,100. Using an experimentally determined molar extinction coefficient for the enzyme-bound flavin, a minimum molecular weight of 146,700 was determined. Based on these data, the oxidase contains eight perhaps identical subunits and four equivalents of FAD. No other β-oxidation enzyme activities are detected in purified preparations of the oxidase. The oxidase flavin does not react with sulfite to form an N(5) flavin-sulfite complex. Photochemical reduction of the oxidase flavin yields a red semiquinone; however, the yield of semiquinone is strongly pH dependent. The yield of semiquinone is significantly reduced below pH 7.5. The flavin semiquinone can be further reduced to the hydroquinone. The behavior of the oxidase flavin during photoreduction and its reactivity toward sulfite are interpreted to reflect the interaction in the N(1)-C(2)O region of the flavin with a group on the protein which acts as a hydrogen-bond acceptor. Like the acyl-CoA dehydrogenases which catalyze the same transformation of acyl-CoA substrates, the oxidase is inactivated by the acetylenic substrate analog, 3-octynoyl-CoA, which acts as an active site-directed inhibitor.  相似文献   

4.
Adrenodoxin reductase, the flavoprotein moiety of the adrenal cortex mitochondrial steroid hydroxylating system, participates in adrenodoxin-dependent cytochrome c and adrenodoxin-independent ferricyanide reduction, with NADPH as electron donor for both of these 1-electron reductions. For ferricyanide reduction, adrenodoxin reductase cycles between oxidized and 2-electron-reduced forms, reoxidation proceeding via the neutral flavin (FAD) semiquinone form (Fig. 9). Addition of adrenodoxin has no effect upon the kinetic parameters of flavoprotein-catalyzed ferricyanide reduction. For cytochrome c reduction, the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin 1:1 complex has been shown to be the catalytically active species (Lambeth, J. D., McCaslin, D. R., and Kamin, H. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 7545-7550). Present studies, using stopped flow techniques, have shown that the 2-electron-reduced form of the complex (produced by reaction with 1 eq of NADPH) reacts rapidly with 1 eq of cytochrome c (k approximately or equal to 4.6 s-1), but only slowly with a second cytochrome c (k = 0.1 to 0.3 s-1). However, when a second NADPH is included, two more equivalents of cytochrome are reduced rapidly. Thus, the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin complex appears to cycle between 1- and 3-electron reduced states, via an intermediate 2-electron-containing form produced by reoxidation by cytochrome (Fig. 10). For ferricyanide reduction by adrenodoxin reductase, the fully reduced and semiquinone forms of flavin each transfer 1 electron at oxidation-reduction potentials which differ by approximately 130 mV. However, adrenodoxin in a complex with adrenodoxin reductase allows electrons of constant potential to be delivered from flavin to cytochrome c via the iron sulfur center...  相似文献   

5.
I Ahmad  M A Cusanovich  G Tollin 《Biochemistry》1982,21(13):3122-3128
Laser flash photolysis has been used to determine the rate constants for the reduction of bovine cytochrome oxidase and the cytochrome c-cytochrome oxidase complex by the semiquinone and fully reduced forms of various flavin analogues (FH. and FH-, respectively). Under the condition used, the reaction of FH. with free cytochrome oxidase is too slow to compete with FH. disproportionation whereas FH- reacts measurably. Both FH. and FH- are effective in reducing the complex. The reduction of heme a in the complex is shown to proceed via cytochrome c, and a limiting first-order rate is observed in the case of FH- at high complex concentrations. The data indicate that the interaction site for electron transfer to cytochrome c is the same in the complex as with the free protein, and although a tight complex exists, at least small reactants like the flavins are not sterically hindered in their access to the bound cytochrome c. Moreover, the results also establish that intramolecular electron transfer between cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase within the complex occurs with a first-order rate constant of greater than 700 s-1. Thus, the presence of cytochrome c greatly enhances electron transfer from reduced flavins to cytochrome oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
Wang W  Winther JR  Thorpe C 《Biochemistry》2007,46(11):3246-3254
The FAD prosthetic group of the ERV/ALR family of sulfhydryl oxidases is housed at the mouth of a 4-helix bundle and communicates with a pair of juxtaposed cysteine residues that form the proximal redox active disulfide. Most of these enzymes have one or more additional distal disulfide redox centers that facilitate the transfer of reducing equivalents from the dithiol substrates of these oxidases to the isoalloxazine ring where the reaction with molecular oxygen occurs. The present study examines yeast Erv2p and compares the redox behavior of this ER luminal protein with the augmenter of liver regeneration, a sulfhydryl oxidase of the mitochondrial intermembrane space, and a larger protein containing the ERV/ALR domain, quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX). Dithionite and photochemical reductions of Erv2p show full reduction of the flavin cofactor after the addition of 4 electrons with a midpoint potential of -200 mV at pH 7.5. A charge-transfer complex between a proximal thiolate and the oxidized flavin is not observed in Erv2p consistent with a distribution of reducing equivalents over the flavin and distal disulfide redox centers. Upon coordination with Zn2+, full reduction of Erv2p requires 6 electrons. Zn2+ also strongly inhibits Erv2p when assayed using tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) as the reducing substrate of the oxidase. In contrast to QSOX, Erv2p shows a comparatively low turnover with a range of small thiol substrates, with reduced Escherichia coli thioredoxin and with unfolded proteins. Rapid reaction studies confirm that reduction of the flavin center of Erv2p is rate-limiting during turnover with molecular oxygen. This comparison of the redox properties between members of the ERV/ALR family of sulfhydryl oxidases provides insights into their likely roles in oxidative protein folding.  相似文献   

7.
Hoober KL  Thorpe C 《Biochemistry》1999,38(10):3211-3217
The flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidase from chicken egg white catalyzes the oxidation of sulfhydryl groups to disulfides with reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. The oxidase contains FAD and a redox-active cystine bridge and accepts a total of 4 electrons per active site. Dithiothreitol (DTT; the best low molecular weight substrate known) reduces the enzyme disulfide bridge with a limiting rate of 502/s at 4 degrees C, pH 7.5, yielding a thiolate-to-flavin charge-transfer complex. Further reduction to EH4 is limited by the slow internal transfer of reducing equivalents from enzyme dithiol to oxidized flavin (3.3/s). In the oxidative half of catalysis, oxygen rapidly converts EH4 to EH2, but Eox appearance is limited by the slow internal redox equilibration. During overall turnover with DTT, the thiolate-to-flavin charge-transfer complex accumulates with an apparent extinction coefficient of 4.9 mM-1 cm-1 at 560 nm. In contrast, glutathione (GSH) is a much slower reductant of the oxidase to the EH2 level and shows a kcat/Km 100-fold smaller than DTT. Full reduction of EH2 by GSH shows a limiting rate of 3.6/s at 4 degrees C comparable to that seen with DTT. Reduced RNase is an excellent substrate of the enzyme, with kcat/Km per thiol some 1000- and 10-fold better than GSH and DTT, respectively. Enzyme-monitored steady-state turnover shows that RNase is a facile reductant of the oxidase to the EH2 state. This work demonstrates the basic similarity in the mechanism of turnover between all of these three substrates. A physiological role for sulfhydryl oxidase in the formation of disulfide bonds in secreted proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Cénas N  Lê KH  Terrier M  Lederer F 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4661-4670
Saccharomyces cerevisiae flavocytochrome b2 (L-lactate:cytochrome c oxido reductase, EC 1.1.2.3) is a homotetramer, with FMN and protoheme IX binding on separate domains. The flavin-binding domains form the enzyme tetrameric core, while the cytochrome b2 domains appear to be mobile around a hinge region (Xia, Z. X., and Mathews, F. S. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 212, 867-863). The enzyme catalyzes electron transfer from L-lactate to cytochrome c, or to nonphysiological acceptors such as ferricyanide, via FMN and heme b2. The kinetics of this multistep reaction are complex. In order to clarify some of its aspects, the tetrameric FMN-binding domain (FDH domain) has been independently expressed in Escherichia coli (Balme, A., Brunt, C. E., Pallister, R., Chapman, S. K., and Reid, G. A. (1995) Biochem. J. 309, 601-605). We present here an additional characterization of this domain. In our hands, it has essentially the same ferricyanide reductase activity as the holo-enzyme. The comparison of the steady-state kinetics with ferricyanide as acceptor and of the pre-steady-state kinetics of flavin reduction, as well as the kinetic isotope effects of the reactions using L-2-[2H]lactate, indicates that flavin reduction is the limiting step in lactate oxidation. During the oxidation of the reduced FDH domain by ferricyanide, the oxidation of the semiquinone is much faster than the oxidation of two-electron-reduced flavin. This order of reactivity is reversed during flavin to heme b2 transfer in the holo-enzyme. Potentiometric studies of the protein yielded a standard redox potential for FMN at pH 7.0, E(o)7, of -81 mV, a value practically identical to the published value of -90 mV for FMN in holo-flavocytochrome b2. However, as expected from the kinetics of the oxidative half-reaction, the FDH domain was characterized by a significantly destabilized flavin semiquinone state compared with holo-enzyme, with a semiquinone formation constant K of 1.25-0.64 vs 33.5, respectively (Tegoni, M., Silvestrini, M. C., Guigliarelli, B., Asso, M., and Bertrand, P. (1998) Biochemistry, 37, 12761-12771). As in the holo-enzyme, the semiquinone state in the FDH domain is significantly stabilized by the reaction product, pyruvate. We also studied the inhibition exerted in the steady and pre steady states by the reaction product pyruvate and by anions (bromide, chloride, phosphate, acetate), with respect to both flavin reduction and reoxidation. The results indicate that these compounds bind to the oxidized and the two-electron-reduced forms of the FDH domain, and that excess L-lactate also binds to the two-electron-reduced form. These findings point to the existence of a common or strongly overlapping binding site. A comparison of the effect of the anions on WT and R289K holo-flavocytochromes b2 indicates that invariant R289 belongs to this site. According to literature data, it must also be present in other members of the family of L-2-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Augmenter of Liver Regeneration (ALR) is a sulfhydryl oxidase carrying out fundamental functions facilitating protein disulfide bond formation. In mammals, it also functions as a hepatotrophic growth factor that specifically stimulates hepatocyte proliferation and promotes liver regeneration after liver damage or partial hepatectomy. Whether ALR also plays a role during vertebrate hepatogenesis is unknown. In this work, we investigated the function of alr in liver organogenesis in zebrafish model. We showed that alr is expressed in liver throughout hepatogenesis. Knockdown of alr through morpholino antisense oligonucleotide (MO) leads to suppression of liver outgrowth while overexpression of alr promotes liver growth. The small-liver phenotype in alr morphants results from a reduction of hepatocyte proliferation without affecting apoptosis. When expressed in cultured cells, zebrafish Alr exists as dimer and is localized in mitochondria as well as cytosol but not in nucleus or secreted outside of the cell. Similar to mammalian ALR, zebrafish Alr is a flavin-linked sulfhydryl oxidase and mutation of the conserved cysteine in the CxxC motif abolishes its enzymatic activity. Interestingly, overexpression of either wild type Alr or enzyme-inactive Alr(C131S) mutant promoted liver growth and rescued the liver growth defect of alr morphants. Nevertheless, alr(C131S) is less efficacious in both functions. Meantime, high doses of alr MOs lead to widespread developmental defects and early embryonic death in an alr sequence-dependent manner. These results suggest that alr promotes zebrafish liver outgrowth using mechanisms that are dependent as well as independent of its sulfhydryl oxidase activity. This is the first demonstration of a developmental role of alr in vertebrate. It exemplifies that a low-level sulfhydryl oxidase activity of Alr is essential for embryonic development and cellular survival. The dose-dependent and partial suppression of alr expression through MO-mediated knockdown allows the identification of its late developmental role in vertebrate liver organogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
p-Cresol methylhydroxylase, a heterodimer consisting of one flavoprotein subunit and one cytochrome c subunit, may be resolved into its subunits, and the holoenzyme may then be fully reconstituted from the pure subunits. In the present study we have characterized the reduction kinetics of the intact enzyme and its subunits, by using exogenous 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone radical generated in the presence of EDTA by the laser-flash-photolysis technique. Under anaerobic conditions the 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone radical reacts rapidly with the native enzyme with a rate constant approaching that of a diffusion-controlled reaction (k = 2.8 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1). Time-resolved difference spectra at pH 7.6 indicate that both flavin and haem are reduced initially by the deazariboflavin semiquinone radical, followed by an additional slower intramolecular electron transfer (k = 220 s-1) from the endogenous neutral flavin semiquinone radical to the oxidized haem moiety of the native enzyme. During the steady-state photochemical titration of the native enzyme at pH 7.6 with deazariboflavin semiquinone radical generated by light-irradiation the haem appeared to be reduced before the protein-bound flavin and was followed by the formation of the protein-bound anionic flavin radical. This result suggests that the redox potential of the haem is higher than that of the flavin, and that deprotonation of the flavin neutral radical occurred during the photochemical titration. Reduction kinetics of the flavoprotein and cytochrome subunits were also investigated by laser-flash photolysis. The protein-bound flavin of the isolated flavin subunit was reduced rapidly by the deazariboflavin semiquinone radical (k = 2.2 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1), as was the haem of the pure cytochrome c subunit (k = 3.7 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1). Flash-induced difference spectra obtained for the flavoprotein and cytochrome subunits at pH 7.6 were consistent with the formation of neutral flavin semiquinone radical and reduced haem, respectively. Investigation of the kinetic properties of the neutral flavin semiquinone radical of the flavoprotein subunit at pH 7.6 and at longer times (up to 5s) were consistent with a slow first-order deprotonation reaction (k = 1 s-1) of the neutral radical to its anionic form.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of an aromatic side chain at position 82 of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c on the kinetics of its electron transfer reactions has been investigated using laser flash photolysis methods to compare a series of site-specific mutant cytochromes in their reduction by free flavin semiquinone and in electron transfer from reduced cytochrome to bovine cytochrome c oxidase. Although small (approximately 10%) but significant differences are observed between some of the mutants (S82, Y82, I82) and wild-type (F82) or G82 cytochrome in the second-order rate constant for reduction by lumiflavin semiquinone, these do not correlate with side-chain aromaticity. In the reaction between the ferrocytochromes and cytochrome c oxidase, significantly larger deviations from exponentiality are found for those mutants having aliphatic residues at position 82 than for wild type or Y82. We interpret the nonexponential behavior in terms of multiple orientations of the cytochromes within the oxidase binding site; the extent to which this occurs is apparently influenced by the character of the residue at position 82. However, a comparison of the average rate constants for electron transfer to cytochrome oxidase for the various mutants reveals that all are closely comparable to WT, except for I82 which is significantly slower (approximately threefold). These results, combined with those obtained previously from steady-state kinetic and thermodynamic measurements, suggest that the observed differences among the mutants are due to alterations in the mode of binding of the cytochrome to the oxidase, rather than to a specific requirement for the presence of an aromatic group at position 82.  相似文献   

13.
Ghanem M  Fan F  Francis K  Gadda G 《Biochemistry》2003,42(51):15179-15188
Choline oxidase catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine betaine, with molecular oxygen acting as primary electron acceptor. Recently, the recombinant enzyme expressed in Escherichia coli was purified to homogeneity and shown to contain FAD in a mixture of oxidized and anionic semiquinone redox states [Fan et al. (2003) Arch. Biochem. Biophys., in press]. In this study, methods have been devised to convert the enzyme-bound flavin semiquinone to oxidized FAD and vice versa, allowing characterization of the resulting forms of choline oxidase. The enzyme-bound oxidized flavin showed typical UV-vis absorbance peaks at 359 and 452 nm (with epsilon(452) = 11.4 M(-1) cm(-1)) and emitted light at 530 nm (with lambda(ex) at 452 nm). The affinity of the enzyme for sulfite was high (with a K(d) value of approximately 50 microM at pH 7 and 15 degrees C), suggesting the presence of a positive charge near the N(1)C(2)=O locus of the flavin. The enzyme-bound anionic flavin semiquinone was unusually insensitive to oxygen or ferricyanide at pH 8 and showed absorbance peaks at 372 and 495 nm (with epsilon(372) = 19.95 M(-1) cm(-1)), maximal fluorescence emission at 454 nm (with lambda(ex) at 372 nm), circular dichroic signals at 370 and 406 nm, and an ESR peak-to-peak line width of 13.9 G. Both UV-vis absorbance studies on the enzyme under turnover with choline and steady-state kinetic data with either choline or betaine aldehyde were consistent with the flavin semiquinone being not involved in catalysis. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters at varying concentrations of both choline and oxygen indicated that a catalytic base is required for choline oxidation but not for oxygen reduction and that the order of the kinetic steps involving substrate binding and product release is not affected by pH.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of ionic strength on the one-electron reduction of oxidized bovine cytochrome c oxidase by reduced bovine cytochrome c has been studied by using flavin semiquinone reductants generated in situ by laser flash photolysis. In the absence of cytochrome c, direct reduction of the heme a prosthetic group of the oxidase by the one-electron reductant 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone occurred slowly, despite a driving force of approximately +1 V. This is consistent with a sterically inaccessible heme a center. This reduction process was independent of ionic strength from 10 to 100 mM. Addition of cytochrome c resulted in a marked increase in the amount of reduced oxidase generated per laser flash. Reduction of the oxidase at the heme a site was monophasic, whereas oxidation of cytochrome c was multiphasic, the fastest phase corresponding in rate constant to the reduction of the heme a. During the fast kinetic phase, 2 equiv of cytochrome c was oxidized per heme a reduced. We presume that the second equivalent was used to reduce the Cua center, although this was not directly measured. The first-order rate-limiting process which controls electron transfer to the heme a showed a marked ionic strength effect, with a maximum rate constant occurring at mu = 110 mM (1470 s-1), whereas the rate constant obtained at mu = 10 mM was 630 s-1 and at mu = 510 mM was 45 s-1. There was no effect of "pulsing" the enzyme on this rate-limiting one-electron transfer process. These results suggest that there are structural differences in the complex(es) formed between mitochondrial cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase at very low and more physiologically relevant ionic strengths, which lead to differences in electron-transfer rate constants.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
R Bisson  B Jacobs  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1980,19(18):4173-4178
Two arylazidocytochrome c derivatives, one modified at lysine-13 and the second modified at lysine-22, were reacted with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase. The lysine-13 modified arylazidocytochrome c was found to cross-link both to the enzyme and with lipid bound to the cytochrome c oxidase complex. The lysine-22 derivative reacted only with lipids. Cross-linking to protein was through subunit II of the cytochrome c oxidase complex, as first reported by Bisson et al. [Bisson, R., Azzi, A., Gutweniger, H., Colonna, R., Monteccuco, C., & Zanotti, A. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 1874]. Binding studies show that the cytochrome c derivative covalently bound to subunit II was in the high-affinity binding site for the substrate. Evidence is also presented to suggest that cytochrome c bound to the lipid was in the low-affinity binding site [as defined by Ferguson-Miller et al. [Ferguson-Miller, S., Brautigan, D. L., & Margoliash, E. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 1104]]. Covalent binding of the cytochrome c derivative into the high-affinity binding site was found to inhibit electron transfer even when native cytochrome c was added as a substrate. Inhibition was almost complete when 1 mol of the Lys-13 modified arylazidocytochrome c was covalently bound to the enzyme per cytochrome c oxidase dimer (i.e., congruent to 280 000 daltons). Covalent binding of either derivative with lipid (low-affinity site) had very little effect on the overall electron transfer activity of cytochrome c oxidase. These results are discussed in terms of current theories of cytochrome c-cytochrome c oxidase interactions.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Rate constants have been measured for the reactions of a series of high-spin cytochromes c' and their low-spin homologues (cytochromes c-554 and c-556) with the semiquinones of free flavins and flavodoxin. These cytochromes are approximately 3 times more reactive with lumiflavin and riboflavin semiquinones than are the c-type cytochromes that are homologous to mitochondrial cytochrome c. We attribute this to the greater solvent exposure of the heme in the c'-type cytochromes. In marked contrast, the cytochromes c' are 3 orders of magnitude less reactive with flavodoxin semiquinone than are the c-type cytochromes. We interpret this result to be a consequence of the location of the exposed heme in cytochrome c' at the bottom of a deep groove in the surface of the protein, which is approximately 10-15 A deep and equally as wide. While free flavins are small enough to enter the groove, the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) prosthetic group of flavodoxin is apparently prevented by steric constraints from approaching the heme more closely than approximately 10 A without dynamic structural rearrangements. Most cytochromes c' are dimeric, but a few are monomeric. The three-dimensional structure of the Rhodospirillum molischianum cytochrome c' dimer suggests that the heme should be more exposed in the monomer than in the dimer, but no relationship is observed between intrinsic reactivity toward free flavin semiquinones and the aggregation state of the protein. Likewise, there is no evidence that the spin state or ligand field of the iron has any effect on intrinsic reactivity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Heckler EJ  Alon A  Fass D  Thorpe C 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4955-4963
The flavoprotein quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) rapidly inserts disulfide bonds into unfolded, reduced proteins with the concomitant reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. This study reports the first heterologous expression and enzymological characterization of a human QSOX1 isoform. Like QSOX isolated from avian egg white, recombinant HsQSOX1 is highly active toward reduced ribonuclease A (RNase) and dithiothreitol but shows a >100-fold lower k cat/ K m for reduced glutathione. Previous studies on avian QSOX led to a model in which reducing equivalents were proposed to relay through the enzyme from the first thioredoxin domain (C70-C73) to a distal disulfide (C509-C512), then across the dimer interface to the FAD-proximal disulfide (C449-C452), and finally to the FAD. The present work shows that, unlike the native avian enzyme, HsQSOX1 is monomeric. The recombinant expression system enabled construction of the first cysteine mutants for mechanistic dissection of this enzyme family. Activity assays with mutant HsQSOX1 indicated that the conserved distal C509-C512 disulfide is dispensable for the oxidation of reduced RNase or dithiothreitol. The four other cysteine residues chosen for mutagenesis, C70, C73, C449, and C452, are all crucial for efficient oxidation of reduced RNase. C452, of the proximal disulfide, is shown to be the charge-transfer donor to the flavin ring of QSOX, and its partner, C449, is expected to be the interchange thiol, forming a mixed disulfide with C70 in the thioredoxin domain. These data demonstrate that all the internal redox steps occur within the same polypeptide chain of mammalian QSOX and commence with a direct interaction between the reduced thioredoxin domain and the proximal disulfide of the Erv/ALR domain.  相似文献   

20.
The reduction of the tetraheme cytochrome c3 (from Desulfovibrio vulgaris, strains Miyazaki F and Hildenbourough) by flavin semiquinone and reduced methyl viologen follows a monophasic kinetic profile, even though the four hemes do not have equivalent reduction potentials. Rate constants for reduction of the individual hemes are obtained subsequent to incrementally reducing the cytochrome by phototitration. The dependence of each rate constant on the reduction potential difference between the heme and the reductant can be described by outer sphere electron transfer theroy. Thus, the very low reduction potentials of the cytochrome c3 hemes compensate for the very large solvent accessibility of the hemes. The relative rate constants for electron transfer to the four hemes of cytochrome c3 are consistent with the assignments of reduction potential to hemes previously made by Park et al. (Park, J.-S., Kano, K., Niki, S. and Akutsu, H. (1991) FEBS Lett. 285, 149-151) using NMR techniques. The ionic strength dependence of the observed rate constant for reduction by the methyl viologen radical cation indicates that ionic strength substantially alters the structure and/or the heme reduction potentials of the cytochrome. This result is confirmed by reduction with a neutral flavin species (5-deazariboflavin semiquinone) in which the reactivity of the highest potential heme decreases and the reactivity of the lowest potential heme increases at high (500 mM) ionic strength, and by the sensitivity of heme methyl resonances to ionic strength as observed by 1H-NMR. These unusual ionic strength-dependent effects may be due to a combination of structural changes in the cytochrome and alterations of the electrostatic fields at elevated ionic strengths.  相似文献   

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