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1.
L Prochaska  R Bisson  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3174-3179
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been reacted with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate ([35S]DABS), [35S]-N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethylsulfonate ([35S]NAP-taurine), and two different radioactive arylazidophospholipids. The labeling of the seven different subunits of the enzyme with these protein modifying reagents has been examined. DABS, a water-soluble, lipid-insoluble reagent, reacted with subunits II, III, IV, V, and VII but labeled I or VI only poorly. The arylazidophospholipids, probes for the bilayer-intercalated portion of cytochrome c oxidase, labeled I, III, and VII heavily and II and IV lightly but did not react with V or VI. NAP-taurine labeled all of the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase. Evidence is presented that this latter reagent reacts with the enzyme from outside the bilayer, and the pattern of labeling with the different hydrophilic and hydrophobic labeling reagents is used to derive a model for the arrangement of subunits in cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
The arrangement of the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits in the inner membrane of bovine heart mitochondria was investigated. The experiments were carried out in three steps. In the first step, exposed subunits were coupled to the membrane-impermeant reagent p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate. In the second step, the membranes were lysed with cholate anc cytochrome c oxidase was isolated by immunoprecipitation. In the third step, the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits were separated from each other by dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis and scanned for radioactivity. Exposed subunits on the outer side of the mitochondrial inner membrane were identified by labeling intact mitochondria. Exposed subunits on the matrix side of the inner membrane were identified by labeling sonically prepared submitochondrial particles in which the matrix side of the inner membrane is exposed to the suspending medium. Since sonic irradiation leads to a rearrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in a large fraction of the resulting submitochondrial particles, an immunochemical procedure was developed for isolating particles with a low content of displaced cytochrome c oxidase. With mitochondria, subunits II, V, and VI were labeled, whereas in purified submitochondrial particles most of the label was in subunit III. The arrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in the mitochondrial inner membrane is thus transmembraneous and asymmetric; subunits II, V, and VI are situated on the outer side, subunit III is situated on the matrix side, and subunits I and IV are buried in the interior of the membrane. In a study of purified cytochrome c oxidase labeled with p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate, the results were similar to those obtained with the membrane-bound enzyme. Subunits I and IV were inaccessible to the reagent, whereas the other four subunits were accessible. In contrast, all six subunits became labeled if the enzyme was dissociated with dodecyl sulfate before being exposed to the labeling reagent.  相似文献   

3.
The subunit arrangement of the F0 sector of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase is examined using hydrophilic and hydrophobic (cleavable) cross-linking reagents and the water-soluble labeling reagent [35S] diazoniumbenzenesulfonate ( [35S]DABS). Cross-linking is performed on purified ATP synthase and inverted minicell membranes. ATP synthase incorporated into liposomes is labeled with [35S]DABS. Three cross-linked products involving the F0 subunits (a, b, and c) are observed with the purified ATP synthase in solution: a-b, b2, and c2 dimers. A cross-link between the F0 and F1 is detected and occurs between the a and beta subunits. A cross-linker independent association between the b and beta subunits is also evident, suggesting that the two subunits are close enough to form a disulfide bridge. A cross-linking reagent stable to reducing agents produces a b-beta dimer, as detected by immunoblotting with anti-beta serum. The c subunit does not cross-link with any F1 polypeptide. Minicell membranes containing ATP synthase polypeptides radioactively labeled in vivo similarly show b2 and c2 dimers after cross-linking. [35S]DABS labels the a and b, but not c, subunits, showing that the a and b, but not c, subunits possess hydrophilic domains. Thus, certain domains of subunits a and b extend from the membrane and are in close proximity to one another and the F1 catalytic subunit beta.  相似文献   

4.
Isolated cytochrome c oxidase was fractionated by native-gel electrophoresis in Triton X-100, and a preparation of enzyme almost completely free of the usual impurities was recovered. This fraction was used to generate antibodies specific to cytochrome c oxidase. These antibodies inhibited cytochrome c oxidase activity rapidly and completely and immunoprecipitated an enzyme containing seven different subunits from detergent-solubilized mitochondria or submitochondrial particles. Reaction of detergent-solubilized cytochrome c oxidase with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate labeled all seven subunits although I and VI were much less reactive than the other five components. When cytochrome c oxidase was immunoprecipitated from mitochondria which had been reacted with [35S]DABS, subunits II and III were the only components labeled. When the complex was immunoprecipitated from labeled submitochondrial particles, II, III, IV, V, and VII were all labeled. Polypeptides I and VI were not labeled from either side of the membrane. These results confirm earlier studies which showed that cytochrome c oxidase spans the mitochondrial inner membrane and is asymmetrically arranged across this permeability barrier.  相似文献   

5.
Calmodulin stimulation of adenylate cyclase of intestinal epithelium   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The effect of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) on the proton pumping two-subunit cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans was investigated. Purified Paracoccus oxidase was reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles by cholate dialysis. Following incubation with increasing amounts of DCCD, proton ejection was recorded in response to reductant pulses with reduced cytochrome c. Concentrations of DCCD which greatly reduced proton pumping by bovine cytochrome c oxidase used as a control were found to exert only a minor effect on proton translocation by Paracoccus oxidase. Similarly, incubation of the bacterial enzyme with [14C]DCCD failed to reveal the specific covalent interaction previously demonstrated to occur with bovine cytochrome c oxidase, and here also shown for the oxidase of yeast. Thus, Paracoccus oxidase differs in its interaction with DCCD from the functionally analogous eukaryotic enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
The arrangement of subunit IV in beef heart cytochrome c oxidase has been explored by chemical labeling and protease digestion studies. This subunit has been purified from four samples of cytochrome c oxidase that had been reacted with N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethyl[35S]-sulfonate (NAP-taurine), diazobenzene[35S]sulfonate, 1-myristoyl-2-[12-[(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)amino]lauroyl]-sn-glycero-3- [14C]phosphocholine (I), and 1-palmitoyl-2-(2-azido-4-nitrobenzoyl)-sn-glycero-3-[3H]phosphocholine (II), respectively. The labeled polypeptide was then fragmented by cyanogen bromide, at arginyl side chains with trypsin (after maleylation), and the distribution of the labeling within the sequence was analyzed. The N-terminal part of subunit IV (residues 1-71) was shown to be heavily labeled by water-soluble, lipid-insoluble reagents but not by the phospholipid derivatives. These latter reagents labeled only in the region of residues 62-122, containing the long hydrophobic and putative membrane-spanning stretch. Trypsin cleavage of native cytochrome c oxidase complex at pH 8.2 was shown to clip the first seven amino acids from subunit IV. This cleavage was found to occur in submitochondrial particles but not in mitochondria or mitoplasts. These results are interpreted to show that subunit IV is oriented with its N terminus on the matrix side of the mitochondrial inner membrane and spans the membrane with the extended sequence of hydrophobic lipid residues 79-98 buried in the bilayer.  相似文献   

7.
The structure and the orientation of cytochrome c oxidase molecules in crystalline cytochrome c oxidase membranes (Vanderkooi, G., Senior, A.E., Capaldi, R.A., and Hayashi, H. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 274, 38-48) were studied by image analysis of electron micrographs and by reacting the crystalline preparations with immune gamma-globulins against individual cytochrome c oxidase subunits. Binding of gamma-globulins to the membranes was detected by the following two methods: (a) electrophoretic identification of gamma-globulin polypeptides in the washed membranes; (b) electron microscopic examination of the negatively stained membranes. The membranes bound immune gamma-globulins against subunit IV (which faces the matrix side in intact mitochondria) but failed to bind immune gamma-globulins against subunits II + III (which face the outer side of the inner membrane in intact mitochondria). In contrast, solubilized cytochrome c oxidase bound either of the two immune gamma-globulins. All cytochrome c oxidase molecules in the crystalline membranes are thus asymmetrically arranged so that subunit IV faces outward and subunits II + III face toward the interior. This orientation is opposite to that found with intact mitochondria. The data also suggest that the crystalline membranes form closed vesicles which are impermeable to externally added gamma-globulins.  相似文献   

8.
In order to investigate the structural interactions of nonionic detergents with bovine heart mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX), a series of hydrophilic chemical modification reagents were used to map regions on COX which are not shielded by dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (DM), Triton X-100 (TX-100), and Tween 80 (TW-80). Low levels of incorporation of the chemical reagents [35S]benzenediazoniumsulfonate (DABS) and N-succinimidyl [3H]propionate (SP) into COX dispersed in TW-80 indicate that the bulky headgroup and hydrophobic moiety of this detergent effectively shield the enzyme from the aqueous environment. Subunits II and Va/Vb [nomenclature of Merle, P., & Kadenbach, B. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 125, 239-244] show an increased reactivity to [35S]DABS and [3H]SP in TW-80 and may reflect an increased exposure of these subunits to the aqueous phase in comparison to COX dispersed in TX-100 or DM. More [35S]DABS is incorporated into COX in DM than TX-100-dispersed enzyme; DABS heavily labels subunits III, VIa, and VIb in DM. While COX in TX-100 is more reactive with [3H]SP than DM-dispersed enzyme, there is no difference in the distribution of label (either DABS or SP) within the subunits of COX in DM or TX-100. Increased surface exposure of COX in TX-100 is indicated by an enhanced sensitivity of COX electron-transfer activity in enzyme chemically modified by the cross-linking reagent N-succinimidyl 3-[(4-azidophenyl)dithio]propionate (SADP) in TX-100 as compared to enzyme chemically cross-linked in the other detergents.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Y Z Zhang  G Ewart  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1991,30(15):3674-3681
The arrangement of three subunits of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase, subunits Va, VIa, and VIII, has been explored by chemical labeling and protease digestion studies. Subunit Va is an extrinsic protein located on the C side of the mitochondrial inner membrane. This subunit was found to label with N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethane[35S]sulfonate and sodium methyl 4-[3H]formylphenyl phosphate in reconstituted vesicles in which 90% of cytochrome c oxidase complexes were oriented with the C domain outermost. Subunit VIa was cleaved by trypsin both in these reconstituted vesicles and in submitochondrial particles, indicating a transmembrane orientation. The epitope for a monoclonal antibody (mAb) to subunit VIa was lost or destroyed when cleavage occurred in reconstituted vesicles. This epitope was localized to the C-terminal part of the subunit by antibody binding to a fusion protein consisting of glutathione S-transferase (G-ST) and the C-terminal amino acids 55-85 of subunit VIa. No antibody binding was obtained with a fusion protein containing G-ST and the N-terminal amino acids 1-55. The mAb reaction orients subunit VIa with its C-terminus in the C domain. Subunit VIII was cleaved by trypsin in submitochondrial particles but not in reconstituted vesicles. N-Terminal sequencing of the subunit VIII cleavage product from submitochondrial particles gave the same sequence as the untreated subunit, i.e., ITA, indicating that it is the C-terminus which is cleaved from the M side. Subunits Va and VIII each contain N-terminal extensions or leader sequences in the precursor polypeptides; subunit VIa is made without an N-terminal extension.  相似文献   

10.
1. The intermediate structures formed during dialysis of mixtures of cholate, phospholipid and cytochrome c oxidase were analysed by gel chromatography and electron microscopy. Measurements of trapped phosphate and the degree of respiratory control were used to assess the integrity of the vesicular structures formed. Protein orientation in the bilayer was monitored by the accessibility of cytochrome c to cytochrome c oxidase. 2. The results indicate that proteoliposome formation by the detergent-dialysis procedure takes place in three distinct stages. In the first stage, cholate/phospholipid and cholate/phospholipid/protein micelles coexist in solution and grow in size as the detergent is slowly removed. At a detergent/phospholipid molar ratio of about 0.2, micelle fusion results in the formation of large bilayer aggregates permeable to both phosphate and cytochrome c. It is at this stage that cytochrome c oxidase is incorporated into the bilayer. In the final stage of dialysis the bilayer sheets fragment into small unilamellar vesicles. 3. The orientation of membrane protein in the final vesicles appears to be determined by the effect of protein conformation on the initial curvature of the bilayer sheets during the fragmentation process.  相似文献   

11.
Bovine heart mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase has been treated with trypsin in order to investigate the role of components a, b, and c (nomenclature of Capaldi) in cytochrome c binding, electron transfer, and proton-pumping activities. Cytochrome c oxidase was dispersed in nondenaturing detergent solution (B. Ludwig, N. W. Downer, and R. A. Capaldi (1979) Biochemistry 18, 1401) and treated with trypsin. This treatment inhibited electron transfer activity by 9% when compared to a similarly treated control in a polarographic assay (493 s-1) and had no large effect on the high affinity (Km = 6.1 X 10(-8) M) or low affinity (Km = 2.2 X 10(-6) M) sites of cytochrome c interaction with cytochrome c oxidase. Direct thermodynamic binding experiments with cytochrome c showed that neither the high affinity (1.04 +/- 0.06 mol cytochrome c/mol cytochrome c oxidase) nor the high-plus-low affinity (2.21 +/- 0.15 mol cytochrome c/mol cytochrome c oxidase) binding sites of cytochrome c on the enzyme were perturbed by the trypsin treatment. Control and trypsin-treated enzyme incorporated into phospholipid vesicles (prepared by the cholate dialysis method) exhibited respiratory control ratios of 6.5 +/- 0.7 and 6.3 +/- 0.6, respectively. The vectorial proton translocation activity in the phospholipid vesicles was unaffected by trypsin treatment with proton translocated to electron transferred ratios being equivalent to the control. NaDodSO4-PAGE showed that components a, b, and c were completely removed by the trypsin treatment. [14C]Iodoacetamide labeling experiments showed that the content of component c in the enzyme was depleted by 85% and that greater than 50% of component a was cleaved upon the trypsin treatment. These results suggest that components a, b, and c are not required for maximum electron transfer and proton translocation activities in the isolated enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The orientation of the three subunits of the membrane-bound succinate dehydrogenase (SDH)-cytochrome b558 complex in Bacillus subtilis was studied in protoplasts ("right side out") and isolated membranes (random orientation), using immunoadsorption and surface labeling with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate. Anti-SDH antibodies were adsorbed by isolated membranes but not by protoplasts. The SDH Mr 65,000 flavoprotein subunit was labeled with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate in isolated membranes but not in protoplasts. The flavoprotein subunit is thus located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. The location of the SDH Mr 28,000 iron-protein subunit was not definitely established, but most probably the iron-protein subunit also is located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Antibodies were not obtained to the hydrophobic cytochrome b558. The cytochrome was strongly labeled with [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate in protoplasts, and labeling was also obtained with isolated membranes. Cytochrome b558 is thus exposed on the outside of the membrane. In B. subtilis SDH binds specifically to cytochrome b558, which suggests that the cytochrome is exposed also on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. The results obtained suggest that the B. subtilis SDH is exclusively located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane where it is bound to cytochrome b558, which spans the membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Poly(A)+RNA from phenol-extracted rat liver polysomes was translated in a heterologous cell-free system derived from wheat germ. The RNA stimulated the incorporation of [35S]methionine into proteins 20- to 30-fold. The labeled translation products were incubated with an antiserum against cytochrome c oxidase. After binding of the antigen x immunoglobulin complex to and elution from protein A-Sepharose and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide step gel electrophoresis, autoradiography was carried out. Mainly one major protein with an apparent molecular weight of 19,500 was visualized. When the unlabeled individual cytochrome c oxidase subunits IV, V, VI, or VII, isolated from preparative SDS-polyacrylamide gels, were added to the translation mixture, it was found that only subunit IV could compete with the in vitro-synthesized protein of 19.5 kilodaltons in respect to the binding to the cytochrome c oxidase antiserum. The in vitro-synthesized product was 3,000 daltons larger than the cytochrome c oxidase subunit polypeptide IV. It is concluded that the subunit IV is synthesized as a precursor. Evidence for the precursor form was obtained from translation experiments with [35S]methionine bound to a specific initiator tRNA which led to a radioactively labeled product of identical electrophoretic mobility as the 19.5 kilodalton protein. Furthermore, two dimensional tryptic fingerprints of subunit IV and its precursor show a high degree of similarity.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome oxidase is purified from rat liver and beef heart by affinity chromatography on a matrix of horse cytochrome c-Sepharose 4B. The success of this procedure, which employs a matrix previously found ineffective with beef or yeast oxidase, is attributed to thorough dispersion of the enzyme with nonionic detergent and a low density of cross-linking between the lysine residues of cytochrome c and the cyanogen bromide activated Sepharose. Beef heart oxidase is purified in one step from mitochondrial membranes solubilized with lauryl maltoside, yielding an enzyme of purity comparable to that obtained on a yeast cytochrome c matrix [Azzi, A., Bill, K., & Broger, C. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2447-2450]. Rat liver oxidase is prepared by hydroxyapatite and horse cytochrome c affinity chromatography in lauryl maltoside, yielding enzyme of high purity (12.5-13.5 nmol of heme a/mg of protein), high activity (TN = 270-400 s-1), and very low lipid content (1 mol of DPG and 1 mol of PI per mol of aa3). The activity of the enzyme is characterized by two kinetic phases, and electron transfer can be stimulated to maximal rates as high as 650 s-1 when supplemented with asolectin vesicles. The rat liver oxidase purified by this method does not contain the polypeptide designated as subunit III. Comparisons of the kinetic behavior of the enzyme in intact membranes, solubilized membranes, and the purified delipidated form reveal complex changes in kinetic parameters accompanying the changes in state and assay conditions, but do not support previous suggestions that subunit III is a critical factor in the binding of cytochrome c at the high-affinity site on oxidase or that cardiolipin is essential for the low-affinity interaction of cytochrome c. The purified rat liver oxidase retains the ability to exhibit respiratory control when reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles, providing definitive evidence that subunit III is not solely responsible for the ability of cytochrome oxidase to produce or respond to a membrane potential or proton gradient.  相似文献   

15.
The electron-transfer and proton-translocation activities of cytochrome c oxidase deficient in subunit III (Mr 29 884) prepared by native gel electrophoresis [Ludwig, B., Downer, N. W., & Capaldi, R. A. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 1401-1407] have been investigated. This preparation has been depleted of 82-87% of its subunit III content as quantitated by Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining intensity on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and [14C]dicyclohexylcarbodiimide labeling. The maximum rate of electron transfer of the subunit III deficient enzyme at pH 6.5 is 383 s-1, 78% of control enzyme. Neither the high-affinity site (Km = 10(-8) M) nor the low-affinity site (Km = 10(-6) M) of the cytochrome c kinetic interaction with cytochrome c oxidase is affected by the removal of subunit III. Subunit III deficient cytochrome c oxidase retains the ability to bind cytochrome c in both the high- and low-affinity sites as determined in direct thermodynamic binding experiments. Liposomes containing this preparation exhibit a respiratory control ratio [Hinkle, P. C., Kim, J. J., & Racker, E. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247, 1338-1341] of 3.9, while liposomes containing control enzyme exhibit a ratio of 4.3, suggesting that they have a similar proton permeability. Vectorial proton translocation initiated by the addition of ferrocytochrome c in liposomes containing subunit III deficient enzyme is decreased by 64% compared to those containing control enzyme. When the proton-translocated to electron-transferred ratio is measured in these phospholipid vesicles at constant enzyme turnover, removal of subunit III from the enzyme decreases the ratio from 0.52 to 0.21, a 60% decrease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
C/57 black mice were immunized with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase, generating 48 hybrid cell lines that secrete antibodies against the different subunits of the enzyme. Immunoblot analysis showed reactions with 7 of the 13 subunits. Among the monoclonal antibodies produced, only those to subunit II gave significant inhibition; these inhibited the enzyme activity completely and prevented cytochrome c binding to the enzyme. Epitope mapping studies indicate that a peptide including residues 200-227 reacts with the antibody, suggesting that the C-terminus of the protein is essential for the binding of this antibody. The carboxyl modifying reagent 1-ethyl-3-[3-(trimethylammonio)propyl]carbodiimide (ETC) was chosen to investigate further the relationship between antibody and cytochrome c binding domains. ETC caused 50% inhibition of the enzyme activity with a first-order time during the first 20 min; a slower reaction over 3 h resulted in 90% inhibition. Cytochrome c binding to the oxidase was inhibited to a similar extent as cytochrome c oxidation, and protection against both effects was afforded by the presence of cytochrome c during ETC modification. Anion-exchange of FPLC of the modified forms of cytochrome oxidase revealed extensive inhomogeneity, indicating random derivatization of a number of different carboxyls even during the first-order reaction, and precluding identification of carboxyl residues related to a specific phase of the reaction. Cytochrome c and the subunit II-specific antibody protected against radioactive labeling of subunit II by ETC in the presence of [14C]glycine ethyl ester, demonstrating that the antibody and cytochrome c occupy significant and overlapping areas on the subunit II surface.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Intact grana and stroma membranes (outer membrane absent) and detergent or sonication disrupted thylakoid membranes were treated with the hydrophilic covalent chemical modifiers [35S]diazonium benzene sulfonic acid ([35S]DABS) and [14C]glycine ethylester plus 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)-carbodiimide metho-p-toluenesulfonate (CDIS). Plastocyanin was purified using column chromatography followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the incorporation of [35S]DABS and [14C]glycine ethylester into plastocyanin was determined by slicing the gels and counting the radioactivity in the plastocyanin band. Plastocyanin isolated from thylakoids disrupted prior to chemical modification binds two to four times as much of either modifier than the plastocyanin isolated from intact chloroplasts. This ratio is five to ten times lower than the ratio expected for a component buried behind the permeability barrier of a membrane. The data suggest that plastocyanin is partially exposed at the external surface of the thylakoid membrane rather than being completely buried in, or behind, the lipo-protein membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Functionally intact plasma membranes were isolated from the cyanobacterium (blue-green alga) Anacystis nidulans through French pressure cell extrusion of lysozyme/EDTA-treated cells, separated from thylakoid membranes by discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and purified by repeated recentrifugation. Origin and identity of the chlorophyll-free plasma membrane fraction were confirmed by labeling of intact cells with impermeant protein markers, [35S]diazobenzenesulfonate and fluorescamine, prior to membrane isolation. Rates of oxidation of reduced horse heart cytochrome c by purified plasma and thylakoid membranes were 90 and 2 nmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1, respectively. The cytochrome oxidase in isolated plasma membranes was identified as a copper-containing aa3-type enzyme from the properties of its redox-active and EDTA-resistant Cu2+ ESR signal, the characteristic inhibition profile, reduced minus oxidized difference spectra, carbon monoxide difference spectra, photoaction and photodissociation spectra of the CO-inhibited enzyme, and immunological cross-reaction of two subunits of the enzyme with antibodies against subunits I and II, and the holoenzyme, of Paracoccus denitrificans aa3-type cytochrome oxidase. The data presented are the first comprehensive evidence for the occurrence of aa3-type cytochrome oxidase in the plasma membrane of a cyanobacterium similar to the corresponding mitochondrial enzyme (EC 1.9.3.1).  相似文献   

19.
Antibodies against synthetic peptides derived from the DNA sequence of human cytochrome c oxidase subunit II (COII) have been tested for their capacity to immunoprecipitate the whole enzyme complex. Antibodies against the COOH-terminal undecapeptide of COII (anti-COII-C), when incubated with a Triton X-100 mitochondrial lysate from HeLa cells pulse-labeled with [35S]methionine under conditions selective for mitochondrial protein synthesis and chased for 18 h in unlabeled medium, precipitated the pulse-labeled three largest subunits (mitochondrially synthesized) of cytochrome c oxidase in proportions close to equimolarity. Antibodies against the NH2-terminal decapeptide of COII (anti-COII-N), although equally reactive as the anti-COII-C antibodies with the sodium dodecyl sulfate-solubilized COII, did not precipitate any of the three labeled subunits from the Triton X-100 mitochondrial lysate. In other experiments, all the 13 subunits which have been identified in the mammalian cytochrome c oxidase were immunoprecipitated from a Triton X-100 mitochondrial lysate of cells long-term labeled with [35S]methionine by anti-COII-C antibodies, but not by anti-COII-N antibodies. By contrast, in immunoblots of total mitochondrial proteins dissociated with sodium dodecyl sulfate, the anti-COII-C antibodies reacted specifically only with COII. These results strongly suggest that, in the native cytochrome c oxidase complex, the epitope recognized by the anti-COII-C antibodies is in the COII subunit and that, therefore, in such complex, the COOH-terminal peptide of COII is exposed to antibodies, whereas the NH2-terminal peptide is not accessible.  相似文献   

20.
The destruction of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster ([2Fe-2S]) in the bc(1) complex by hematoporphyrin-promoted photoinactivation resulted in the complex becoming proton-permeable. To study further the role of this [2Fe-2S] cluster in proton translocation of the bc(1) complex, Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutants expressing His-tagged cytochrome bc(1) complexes with mutations at the histidine ligands of the [2Fe-2S] cluster were generated and characterized. These mutants lacked the [2Fe-2S] cluster and possessed no bc(1) activity. When the mutant complex was co-inlaid in phospholipid vesicles with intact bovine mitochondrial bc(1) complex or cytochrome c oxidase, the proton ejection, normally observed in intact reductase or oxidase vesicles during the oxidation of their corresponding substrates, disappeared. This indicated the creation of a proton-leaking channel in the mutant complex, whose [2Fe-2S] cluster was lacking. Insertion of the bc(1) complex lacking the head domain of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein, removed by thermolysin digestion, into PL vesicles together with mitochondrial bc(1) complex also rendered the vesicles proton-permeable. Addition of the excess purified head domain of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein partially restored the proton-pumping activity. These results indicated that elimination of the [2Fe-2S] cluster in mutant bc(1) complexes opened up an otherwise closed proton channel within the bc(1) complex. It was speculated that in the normal catalytic cycle of the bc(1) complex, the [2Fe-2S] cluster may function as a proton-exiting gate.  相似文献   

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