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1.
Nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR), Pseudomonas stutzeri, catalyses the 2 electron reduction of nitrous oxide to di-nitrogen. The enzyme has 2 identical subunits (Mr approximately 70,000) of known amino acid sequence and contains approximately 4 Cu ions per subunit. By measurement of the optical absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and low-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the oxidised state, a semi-reduced form and the fully reduced state of the enzyme it is shown that the enzyme contains 2 distinct copper centres of which one is assigned to an electron-transfer function, centre A, and the other to a catalytic site, centre Z. The latter is a binuclear copper centre with at least 1 cysteine ligand and cycles between oxidation levels Cu(II)/Cu(II) and Cu(II)/Cu(I) in the absence of substrate or inhibitors. The state Cu(II)/Cu(I) is enzymatically inactive. The MCD spectra provide evidence for a second form of centre Z, which may be enzymatically active, in the oxidised state of the enzyme. Centre A is structurally similar to that of CuA in bovine and bacterial cytochrome c oxidase and also contains copper ligated by cysteine. This centre may also be a binuclear copper complex.  相似文献   

2.
When cytochrome c oxidase is incubated at 43 degrees C for approximately 75 min in a solution containing the zwitterionic detergent sulfobetaine 12, the CuA site is converted into a type II copper as judged by changes in the 830-nm absorption band and the EPR spectrum of the enzyme. SDS-PAGE and sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation indicate concomitant loss of subunit III and monomerization of the enzyme during the heat treatment. Comparison of the optical and resonance Raman spectra of the heat-treated and native protein shows that the heme chromophores are not significantly perturbed; the resonance Raman data indicate that the small heme perturbations observed are limited to the cytochrome a3 site. Proton pumping measurements, conducted on the modified enzyme reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles, indicate that these vesicles are unusually permeable toward protons during turnover, as previously reported for the p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate-modified oxidase and the modified enzyme obtained by heat treatment in lauryl maltoside. The sulfobetaine 12 modified enzyme is no longer capable of undergoing the recently reported conformational transition in which the tryptophan fluorescence changes upon reduction of the low-potential metal centers. Control studies on the monomeric and subunit III dissociated enzymes suggest that the disruption of this conformational change in the heat-treated oxidase is most likely associated with perturbation of the CuA site. These results lend support to the suggestion that the fluorescence-monitored conformational change of the native enzyme is initiated by reduction of the CuA site [Copeland et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 7311].  相似文献   

3.
P M Li  J E Morgan  T Nilsson  M Ma  S I Chan 《Biochemistry》1988,27(19):7538-7546
It has been previously reported that mild heat treatment (43 degrees C for ca. 60 min) abolishes the proton pumping activity of cytochrome c oxidase while leaving the oxidase activity and cytochromes a and a3 unperturbed [Sone, N., & Nicholls, P. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6550-6554]. We herein describe the effects of this heat treatment on the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical absorption signatures of the redox-active metal centers in the enzyme. We find that heat treatment of the oxidized enzyme causes a local structural perturbation at the CuA site. After heat treatment, the enzyme sample contains three subpopulations, each of which has a different structure at CuA. These include (i) native CuA, (ii) a type 2 copper species similar to the one produced by chemical modification by p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate (pHMB) [Gelles, J., & Chan, S. I. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3963-3972], and (iii) a novel type 1 copper species. In addition to changes at the CuA site, we find that heat treatment results in accelerated cyanide binding and the removal of subunit III. If the cytochrome c oxidase is heat treated while fully reduced, none of these changes are observed except for subunit III depletion. Furthermore, partial (CO mixed-valence derivative) reduction of the enzyme as well as ligand binding to cytochrome a3 also protects the enzyme against the heat-induced changes, indicating that the oxygen binding site plays a role in stabilizing the CuA site against structural perturbations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome caa3, a cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, is a two-subunit enzyme containing the four canonical metal centers of cytochrome c oxidases (cytochromes a and a3; copper centers CuA and CuB) and an additional cytochrome c. The smaller subunit contains heme C and was termed the C-protein. We have cloned the genes encoding the subunits of the oxidase and determined the nucleotide sequence of the C-protein gene. The gene and deduced primary amino acid sequences establish that both the gene and the protein are fusions with a typical subunit II sequence and a characteristic cytochrome c sequence; we now call this subunit IIc. The protein thus appears to represent a covalent joining of substrate (cytochrome c) to its enzyme (cytochrome c oxidase). In common with other subunits II, subunit IIc contains two hydrophobic segments of amino acids near the amino terminus that probably form transmembrane helices. Variability analysis of the Thermus and other subunit II sequences suggests that the two putative transmembrane helices in subunit II may be located on the surface of the hydrophobic portion of the intact cytochrome oxidase protein complex. Also in common with other subunits II is a relatively hydrophilic intermembrane domain containing a set of conserved amino acids (2 cysteines and 2 histidines) which have previously been proposed by others to serve as ligands to the CuA center. We compared the subunit IIc sequence with that of related proteins. N2O reductase of Pseudomonas stutzeri, a multi-copper protein that appears to contain a CuA site (Scott, R.A., Zumft, W.G., Coyle, C.L., and Dooley, D.M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4082-4086), contains a 59-residue sequence element that is homologous to the "CuA sequence motif" found in cytochrome oxidase subunits II, including all four putative copper ligands. By contrast, subunit II of the Escherichia coli quinol oxidase, cytochrome bo, also contains a region homologous to the CuA motif, but it lacks the proposed metal binding histidine and cysteine residues; this is consistent with the apparent absence of CuA from cytochrome bo.  相似文献   

5.
The cytochrome o complex is a bo-type ubiquinol oxidase in the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. This complex has a close structural and functional relationship with the eukaryotic and prokaryotic aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. The specific activity, subunit composition, and metal content of the purified cytochrome o complex are not consistent for different preparative protocols reported in the literature. This paper presents a relatively simple preparation of the enzyme starting with a strain of Escherichia coli which overproduces the oxidase. The pure enzyme contains four subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Partial amino acid sequence data confirm the identities of subunit I, II, and III from the SDS-PAGE analysis as the cyoB, cyoA, and cyoC gene products, respectively. A slight modification of the purification protocol yields an oxidase preparation that contains a possible fifth subunit which may be the cyoE gene product. The pure four-subunit enzyme contains 2 equivs of iron but only 1 equiv of copper. There is no electron paramagnetic resonance detectable copper in the purified enzyme. Hence, the equivalent of CuA of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases is absent in this quinol oxidase. There is also no zinc in the purified quinol oxidase. Finally, monoclonal antibodies are reported that interact with subunit II. One of these monoclonals inhibits the quinol oxidase activity of the detergent-solubilized, purified oxidase. Hence, although subunit II does not contain CuA and does not interact with cytochrome c, it still must have an important function in the bo-type ubiquinol oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
The nature of CuA in cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
P M Li  B G Malmstr?m  S I Chan 《FEBS letters》1989,248(1-2):210-211
Kroneck et al. [(1988) FEBS Lett. 242, 70-74] have recently suggested, on the basis of a comparison with the EPR properties of nitrous oxide reductase, that cytochrome c oxidase contains a mixed-valence binuclear copper site, and that this is responsible for the EPR spectrum generally ascribed to CuA. Here we question this hypothesis in view of a multitude of analytical and spectroscopic data available. We maintain that a mononuclear Cu site with two cysteine sulfur and two imidazole nitrogen atoms as ligands is consistent with the current experimental information on the CuA site.  相似文献   

7.
The method of continuous saturation has been used to measure the electron spin relaxation parameter T1T2 at temperatures between 10 and 50 K for a variety of S = 1/2 species including: CuA and cytochrome a of cytochrome c oxidase, the type 1 copper in several blue copper proteins, the type 2 copper in laccase, inorganic Cu(II) complexes, sulfur radicals, and low spin heme proteins. The temperature dependence and the magnitude of T1T2 for all of the species examined are accounted for by assuming that the Van Vleck Raman process dominates the electron spin-lattice relaxation. Over the entire temperature range examined, the relaxation of the type 1 coppers in six to seven times faster than that of type 2 copper, inorganic copper, and sulfur radicals, in spite of the similar g-anisotropies of these species. This result may indicate that the coupling of the phonon bath to the spin center is more effective in type 1 coppers than in the other complexes studied. The relaxation of CuA of cytochrome oxidase exhibits an unusual temperature dependence relative to the other copper complexes studied, suggesting that the protein environment of this center is different from that of the other copper centers studied and/or that CuA is influenced by a magnetic dipolar interaction with another, faster-relaxing paramagnetic site in the enzyme. A comparison of the saturation characteristics of the CuA EPR signal in native and partially reduced CO complexes of the enzyme also suggests the existence of such an interaction. The implications of these results with respect to the disposition of the metal centers in cytochrome oxidase are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The visible-near-i.r.-region m.c.d. (magnetic-circular-dichroism) spectrum recorded at low temperature in the range 450-900 nm is reported for oxidized resting mammalian cytochrome c oxidase. M.c.d. magnetization curves determined at different wavelengths reveal the presence of two paramagnetic species. Curves at 576, 613 and 640 nm fit well to those expected for an x,y-polarized haem transition with g values of 3.03, 2.21 and 1.45, i.e. cytochrome a3+. The m.c.d. features at 515, 785 and 817 nm magnetize as a S = 1/2 paramagnet with average g values close to 2, and simulated m.c.d. magnetization curves obtained by using the observed g values of CuA2+, i.e. 2.18, 2.03 and 1.99, fit well to the experimental observations. The form of the m.c.d. magnetization curve at 466 nm is curious, but it can be explained if CuA2+ and cytochrome a3+ contribute with oppositely signed bands at this wavelength. By comparing the m.c.d. spectrum of the enzyme with that of extracted haem a-bisimidazole complex it has been possible to deconvolute the m.c.d. spectrum of CuA2+, which shows transitions throughout the spectral region from 450 to 950 nm. The m.c.d.-spectral properties of CuA2+ were compared with those of a well-defined type I blue copper centre in azurin isolated from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The absolute intensities of the m.c.d. signals at equal fields and temperatures for CuA2+ are 10-20-fold greater than those for azurin. The optical spectrum of CuA2+ strongly suggests an assignment as a d9 ion rather than Cu(I) bound to a thiyl radical.  相似文献   

9.
To probe the location of the quinol oxidation site and physical interactions for inter-subunit electron transfer, we constructed and characterized two chimeric oxidases in which subunit II (CyoA) of cytochrome bo-type ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli was replaced with the counterpart (CaaA) of caa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from thermophilic Bacillus PS3. In pHNchi5, the C-terminal hydrophilic domain except a connecting region as to transmembrane helix II of CyoA was replaced with the counterpart of CaaA, which carries the Cu(A) site and cytochrome c domain. The resultant chimeric oxidase was detected immunochemically and spectroscopically, and the turnover numbers for Q(1)H(2) (ubiquinol-1) and TMPD (N,N, N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) oxidation were 28 and 8.5 s(-1), respectively. In pHNchi6, the chimeric oxidase was designed to carry a minimal region of the cupredoxin fold containing all the Cu(A) ligands, and showed enzymatic activities of 65 and 5.1 s(-1), and an expression level better than that of pHNchi5. Kinetic analyses proved that the apparent lower turnover of the chimeric enzyme by pHNchi6 was due to the higher K(m) of the enzyme for Q(1)H(2) (220 microM) than that of cytochrome bo (48 microM), while in the enzyme by pHNchi5, both substrate-binding and internal electron transfer were perturbed. These results suggest that the connecting region and the C-terminal alpha(1)-alpha(2)-beta(11)-alpha(3) domain of CyoA are involved in the quinol oxidation and/or physical interactions for inter-subunit electron transfer, supporting our previous proposal [Sato-Watanabe, M., Mogi, T., Miyoshi, H., and Anraku, Y. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 12744-12752]. The close relationship of E. coli quinol oxidases to cytochrome c oxidase of Gram-positive bacteria like Bacillus was also indicated.  相似文献   

10.
The removal of copper from beef heart cytochrome c oxidase by either dialysis against potassium cyanide or by treatment with bathocuproine sulfonate produced changes in the enzyme which are indicative of a spin state transition. In the Soret region of the CD spectrum copper depletion of the enzyme caused a significant decrease in amplitude in combination with a red shift of the peak maximum for oxidized samples, while reduced copper-depleted samples exhibited decreased amplitude and a blue shift of the peak maximum. In the magnetic CD spectra of oxidized copper-depleted samples the peak at 420 nm was shifted to lower wave-length along with a significant increase in amplitude. In reduced samples the peak at 446 nm exhibited a slight red shift concomitant with a substantial decrease in amplitude. The conformational changes indicated by the CD and magnetic CD spectra when copper is removed from the enzyme were supported by the EPR spectra of the NO complex of the reduced copper-depleted enzyme. The removal of copper from cytochrome c oxidase caused the NO complex to exhibit a 3-line splitting pattern of gz in the EPR spectrum instead of the 9 lines seen in the NO complex of the native enzyme. When [15N]NO was used, a 2-line pattern was seen at gz when copper was removed from the enzyme. The changes in the CD and magnetic CD spectra and in the EPR spectra of the NO derivatives of cytochrome c oxidase can be explained by the rearrangement of the axial ligands to iron in cytochrome a3 as a result of copper depletion. These results emphasize the close structural interdependence of the metallic components of this enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The CuA center is a dinuclear Cu2S2(Cys) electron transfer center found in cytochrome c oxidase and nitrous oxide reductase. In a previous investigation of the equatorial histidine ligands' effect on the reduction potential, electron transfer and spectroscopic properties of the CuA center, His120 in the engineered CuA azurin was mutated to Asn, Asp, and Ala. The identical absorption and EPR spectra of these mutants indicate that a common ligand is bound to the copper center. To identify this replacement ligand, the His120Gly CuA azurin mutant was constructed and purified. Absorption and X-band EPR spectra show that His120Gly is similar to the other His120X (X = Asn, Asp, Ala) mutant proteins. Titrations with chloride, imidazole, and azide suggest that the replacement ligand is not exchangeable with exogenous ligands. The possibility of an internal amino acid acting as the replacement ligand for His120 in the His120X mutant proteins was investigated by analyzing the CuA azurin crystal structure and then converting the likely internal ligand, Asn 119, to Asp, Ser, or Ala in the His120Gly mutant. The double mutants H120G/Asn 119X (X = Asp, Ser, or Ala) displayed UV-Vis absorption and EPR spectra that are identical to His120Gly and the other His120X mutants, indicating that Asn119 is not the internal ligand replacing His120 in the His120X mutant proteins. These results demonstrate the remarkable stability of the dinuclear His120 mutants of CuA azurin.  相似文献   

13.
The cytochrome-bo quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli contains a high-spin b-type heme (cytochrome o), a low-spin b-type heme (cytochrome b) and copper. The EPR signal from cytochrome o is axial high spin and when titrated potentiometrically gives a bell-shaped curve. The low-potential side of this curve (Em7 approx. 160 mV) corresponds to the reduction/oxidation of the cytochrome. The high-potential side (Em7 approx. 350 mV) is proposed to be due to reduction/oxidation of a copper center; in the CuII form tight cytochrome o-copper spin coupling results in a net even spin system and loss of the EPR spectrum. Optical spectra of the alpha-bands of the reduced cytochromes at 77 K show that cytochrome b has its maxima at 564 nm when cytochrome o is oxidized but that this shifts to 561 nm when cytochrome o (max. 555 nm) is reduced. Both a heme-copper (cytochrome o-CuII) and a heme-heme (cytochrome o-cytochrome b) interaction are indicated in this quinol oxidase. These results indicate that cytochrome-bo quinol oxidase has a binuclear heme-copper catalytic site and suggest striking structural similarity to subunit I of the cytochrome aa3 system.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrous oxide reductase is the terminal component of a respiratory chain that utilizes N2O in lieu of oxygen. It is a homodimer carrying in each subunit the electron transfer site, CuA, and the substrate-reducing catalytic centre, CuZ. Spectroscopic data have provided robust evidence for CuA as a binuclear, mixed-valence metal site. To provide further structural information on the CuA centre of N2O reductase, site directed mutagenesis and Cu K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopic investigation have been undertaken. Candidate amino acids as ligands for the CuA centre of the enzyme from Pseudomonas stutzeri ATCC14405 were substituted by evolutionary conserved residues or amino acids similar to the wild-type residues. The mutations identified the amino acids His583, Cys618, Cys622 and Met629 as ligands of Cu1, and Cys618, Cys622 and His626 as the minimal set of ligands for Cu2 of the CuA centre. Other amino acid substitutions indicated His494 as a likely ligand of CuZ, and an indirect role for Asp580, compatible with a docking function for the electron donor. Cu binding and spectroscopic properties of recombinant N2O reductase proteins point at intersubunit or interdomain interaction of CuA and CuZ. Cu K-edge X-ray absorption spectra have been recorded to investigate the local environment of the Cu centres in N2O reductase. Cu K-edge Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) for binuclear Cu chemical systems show clear evidence for Cu backscattering at approximately 2.5 A. The Cu K-edge EXAFS of the CuA centre of N2O reductase is very similar to that of the CuA centre of cytochrome c oxidase and the optimum simulation of the experimental data involves backscattering from a histidine group with Cu-N of 1.92 A, two sulfur atoms at 2.24 A and a Cu atom at 2. 43 A, and allows for the presence of a further light atom (oxygen or nitrogen) at 2.05 A. The interpretation of the CuA EXAFS is in line with ligands assigned by site-directed mutagenesis. By a difference spectrum approach, using the Cu K-edge EXAFS of the holoenzyme and that of the CuA-only form, histidine was identified as a major contributor to the backscattering. A structural model for the CuA centre of N2O reductase has been generated on the basis of the atomic coordinates for the homologous domain of cytochrome c oxidase and incorporating our current results and previous spectroscopic data.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochrome o complex of Escherichia coli is a ubiquinol oxidase which is the predominant respiratory terminal oxidase when the bacteria are grown under high oxygen tension. The amino acid sequences of three of the subunits of this quinol oxidase reveal a substantial relationship to the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. The two cytochrome components (b563.5 and o) and the single copper (CuB) present in the E. coli quinol oxidase appear to be equivalent to cytochrome a, cytochrome a3, and CuB of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases, respectively. These three prosthetic groups are all located within subunit I of the oxidase. Sequence alignments indicate only six totally conserved histidine residues among all known sequences of subunit I of the cytochrome c oxidases of various species plus the E. coli quinol oxidase. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to change each of these totally conserved histidines with the presumption that two of these six must ligate to the low spin cytochrome center of the E. coli oxidase. The presence of the low spin cytochrome b563.5 component of the oxidase can be evaluated both by visible absorbance properties and by its EPR spectrum. The results unambiguously indicate that His-106 and His-421 are the ligands of the six-coordinate low spin cytochrome b563.5. Although the data are not definitive in making additional metal ligation assignments of the remaining four totally conserved histidines, a reasonable model is suggested for the structure of the catalytic core of the cytochrome o complex and, by extrapolation, of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

16.
W Dowhan  C R Bibus    G Schatz 《The EMBO journal》1985,4(1):179-184
Yeast cytochrome c oxidase contains three large subunits made in mitochondria and at least six smaller subunits made in the cytoplasm. There is evidence that the catalytic centers (heme a and copper) are associated with the mitochondrially-made subunits, but the role of the cytoplasmically-made subunits has remained open. Using a gene interruption technique, we have now constructed a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant which lacks the largest of the cytoplasmically-made subunits (subunit IV). This mutant is devoid of cyanide-sensitive respiration, the absorption spectrum of cytochrome aa3 and cytochrome c oxidase activity. It still contains the other cytochrome c oxidase subunits but these are not assembled into a stable complex. Active cytochrome c oxidase was restored to the mutant by introducing a plasmid-borne wild-type subunit IV gene; no restoration was seen with a gene carrying an internal deletion corresponding to amino acid residues 28-66 of the mature subunit. Subunit IV is thus necessary for proper assembly of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

17.
It has been shown that efficient functioning of photosynthesis and respiration in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 requires the presence of either cytochrome c6 or plastocyanin. In order to check whether the blue copper protein plastocyanin can act as electron donor to cytochrome c oxidase, we investigated the intermolecular electron transfer kinetics between plastocyanin and the soluble CuA domain (i.e. the donor binding and electron entry site) of subunit II of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase from Synechocystis. Both copper proteins were expressed heterologously in Escherichia coli. The forward and the reverse electron transfer reactions were studied yielding apparent bimolecular rate constants of (5.1+/-0.2) x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) and (8.5+/-0.4) x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), respectively (20 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7). This corresponds to an apparent equilibrium constant of 0.06 in the physiological direction (reduction of CuA), which is similar to Keq values calculated for the reaction between c-type cytochromes and the soluble fragments of other CuA domains. The potential physiological role of plastocyanin in cyanobacterial respiration is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A procedure for isolation of cytochrome oxidase and cytochrome P-450 from adrenocortical mitochondria was developed. The heme and copper contents, subunit composition, optical and EPR spectra for these enzymes were determined. The effects of pH, substrates and some inhibitors on the spectra of cytochrome P-450 were studied. It was found that cytochrome oxidase did not inhibit the reactions catalyzed by cytochrome P-450; cytochrome P-450 had no inhibiting effect on the oytochrome oxidase activity.  相似文献   

20.
From Nitrosomonas europaea which had been cultivated in a medium deficient in copper, cytochrome c oxidase (aa3-type) which did not have CuA was purified. The oxidase did not show the 830-nm peak and its ESR spectrum differed greatly from that of the normal enzyme, which has two copper atoms, CuA and CuB, per molecule. However, the oxidase which did not have CuA showed almost the same cytochrome c oxidizing activity as the normal oxidase.  相似文献   

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