首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 984 毫秒
1.
Reduction of cytochrome b in isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase is a triphasic reaction. Initially, there is a relatively rapid, partial reduction of the cytochrome b, the rate of which matches the rate of reduction of cytochrome c1. This is followed by partial or complete reoxidation of the b, which is then followed by slow rereduction. At very low concentrations of succinate, the initial partial reduction of b is followed by reoxidation, but the third (rereduction) phase is absent, owing to insufficient substrate to rereduce the cytochromes. If antimycin is added at various times during the triphasic reaction, it inhibits the reoxidation and also inhibits the rereduction phase. Antimycin does not inhibit the initial phase of b reduction and, if added before or during this phase, it causes reduction of b to proceed to completion as a monophasic reaction. Myxothiazol inhibits the first phase of b reduction and the subsequent reoxidation, but does not inhibit the third, slow phase of b reduction. The resulting monophasic reduction of b which is observed in the presence of myxothiazol is slower than that in the presence of antimycin. The combination of both inhibitors, whether added together or successively during the triphasic reaction, completely inhibits b reduction. The triphasic reduction of cytochrome b is consistent with electron transfer by a protonmotive Q cycle in which there are two pathways for cytochrome b reduction. One pathway allows the initial phase of cytochrome b reduction by a myxothiazol-sensitive reaction in which reduction of b by ubisemiquinone is linked to reduction of iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1 by ubiquinol. In the second phase of the triphasic reaction, the b cytochromes are reoxidized by ubiquinone or ubisemiquinone through an antimycin-sensitive reaction. If oxidation of ubiquinol by iron-sulfur protein is blocked, either by myxothiazol or by reduction of iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1, the b cytochromes can be reduced by reversal of the antimycin-sensitive pathway, thus accounting for the third phase of b reduction.  相似文献   

2.
L Clejan  D S Beattie 《Biochemistry》1986,25(24):7984-7991
Mitochondria isolated from coenzyme Q deficient yeast cells had no detectable NADH:cytochrome c reductase or succinate:cytochrome c reductase but had comparable amounts of cytochromes b and c1 as wild-type mitochondria. Addition of succinate to the mutant mitochondria resulted in a slight reduction of cytochrome b; however, the subsequent addition of antimycin resulted in a biphasic reduction of cytochrome b, leading to reduction of 68% of the total dithionite-reducible cytochrome b. No "red" shift in the absorption maximum was observed, and no cytochrome c1 was reduced. The addition of either myxothiazol or alkylhydroxynaphthoquinone blocked the reduction of cytochrome b observed with succinate and antimycin, suggesting that the reduction of cytochrome b-562 in the mitochondria lacking coenzyme Q may proceed by a pathway involving cytochrome b at center o where these inhibitors block. Cyanide did not prevent the reduction of cytochrome b by succinate and antimycin the the mutant mitochondria. These results suggest that the succinate dehydrogenase complex can transfer electrons directly to cytochrome b in the absence of coenzyme Q in a reaction that is enhanced by antimycin. Reduced dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP) acted as an effective bypass of the antimycin block in complex III, resulting in oxygen uptake with succinate in antimycin-treated mitochondria. By contrast, reduced DCIP did not restore oxygen uptake in the mutant mitochondria, suggesting that coenzyme Q is necessary for the bypass. The addition of low concentrations of DCIP to both wild-type and mutant mitochondria reduced with succinate in the presence of antimycin resulted in a rapid oxidation of cytochrome b perhaps by the pathway involving center o, which does not require coenzyme Q.  相似文献   

3.
By means of the method of fluorimetric titration it has been shown that mucidin does not affect the attachment of antimycin to membranes from anaerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans. The fluorimetric titration with antimycin can be used in the determination of the amount of the cytochrome bc1 complex in the membrane. In cells inhibited with antimycin, the oxidation of cytochromes c was accompanied by the reduction of cytochrome b; in the presence of mucidin this effect did not take place. The results, which indicated a difference in binding sites, were interpreted in terms of the Q-cycle [Mitchell (1976) J. Theor. Biol. 62, 327-367; Trumpower (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 639, 129-155]. Comparable sensitivity towards antimycin and mucidin was shown by other typical denitrifying bacteria: Pseudomonas stutzeri and Alcaligenes xylosoidans, subspecies denitrificans.  相似文献   

4.
Mucidin similar to antimycin inhibits the electron flow to cytochrome c and the enzyme activities dependent on cytochrome c reduction in the cells of Paracoccus denitrificans, but it does not inhibit the electron flow to nitrate reductase and cytochrome o. Unlike antimycin mucidin does not permit a residual electron flow through the cytochrome bc1 region. In the presence of antimycin the electron flow to nitrate is lower than in using mucidin in contrast with a higher extent of cytochrome b reduction. This result is in contradiction to the participation of the constitutive cytochrome b as an electron donor in the nitrate reduction.  相似文献   

5.
Two sets of studies have been reported on the electron transfer pathway of complex III in bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP). 1) In the presence of myxothiazol, MOA-stilbene, stigmatellin, or of antimycin added to SMP pretreated with ascorbate and KCN to reduce the high potential components (iron-sulfur protein (ISP) and cytochrome c(1)) of complex III, addition of succinate reduced heme b(H) followed by a slow and partial reduction of heme b(L). Similar results were obtained when SMP were treated only with KCN or NaN(3), reagents that inhibit cytochrome oxidase, not complex III. The average initial rate of b(H) reduction under these conditions was about 25-30% of the rate of b reduction by succinate in antimycin-treated SMP, where both b(H) and b(L) were concomitantly reduced. These results have been discussed in relation to the Q-cycle hypothesis and the effect of the redox state of ISP/c(1) on cytochrome b reduction by succinate. 2) Reverse electron transfer from ISP reduced with ascorbate plus phenazine methosulfate to cytochrome b was studied in SMP, ubiquinone (Q)-depleted SMP containing 相似文献   

6.
The reoxidation of reduced yeast Complex III by oxidants believed to react with cytochrome c1 exhibited multiple phases for both cytochrome c1 and the cytochromes b; the reoxidation of cytochrome b, but not cytochrome c1, was markedly slowed by the presence of antimycin. The data are consistent with the Q-cycle or any other scheme which proposes a branched path for electron transport between the cytochrome b centers and the endogenous Q6, provided certain constraints are relaxed. The reoxidation of the endogenous quinone proceeded at a rate comparable to that of the rapidly reacting cytochrome b and appeared to be complete within 100 ms. Removal of the endogenous quinone did not change the rate or extent of reoxidation of any of the heme centers, demonstrating that quinone is not required for electron transport between cytochromes b and the iron-sulfur cluster. This result is inconsistent with the requirements of the Q-cycle. Funiculosin completely inhibited the reoxidation of cytochrome b whereas the reoxidation of cytochrome c1 exhibited simple first-order kinetics in the presence of this inhibitor, implying that the iron-sulfur cluster is on the direct path of electron transfer from cytochrome b to cytochrome c1. Potent inhibition of cytochrome b oxidation was also observed with myxothiazol and mucidin. The reaction of reduced Complex III with Q1 also exhibited multiple phases in the oxidation of the cytochrome b centers; these phases were unaffected by the presence of myxothiazol. Addition of antimycin, or removal of the endogenous quinone, eliminated the rapid phases; only one of the cytochrome b centers was oxidized under these conditions. Epr showed that it is the low-potential cytochrome b that is the species rapidly oxidized.  相似文献   

7.
The antibiotic funiculosin mimics the action of antimycin in several ways. It inhibits the oxidation of NADH and succinate, but not TMPD+ascorbate. The titer for maximal inhibition in Mg2+-ATP particles (0.4-0.6 nmol/mg protein) is close to the concentrations of cytochromes b and cc1. Funiculosin also induces the oxidation of cytochromes cc1 and an extra reduction of cytochrome b in the aerobic steady state, and it inhibits duroquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity in isolated Complex III. The location of the funiculosin binding site is clearly similar to that of antimycin. In addition, funiculosin, like antimycin, prevents electron transport from duroquinol to cytochrome b in isolated Complex III if the complex is pre-reduced with ascorbate. Funiculosin and antimycin differ, however, in the manner in which they modulate the reduction of cytochrome b by ascorbate+TMPD.  相似文献   

8.
A study is presented of the effect of Zn2+ on the enzymatic properties of the bovine-heart cytochrome-bc1 complex. Micromolar concentrations of Zn2+ reversibly inhibit the cytochrome-c reductase activity of either the cholate-solubilized or liposome-reconstituted complex. Kinetic analysis of the redox reactions of the cytochromes indicate that Zn2+ affects the activity of the complex at the quinol oxidation site. The following have been determined: (a) Zn2+ inhibits the pre-steady-state reduction of cytochrome c1 by duroquinol either in the absence or in the presence of antimycin, (b) it does not inhibit the reduction of b cytochromes in the absence of antimycin or in the presence of myxothiazol, (c) it inhibits cytochrome-b reduction in the presence of antimycin. Furthermore Zn2+ inhibits the antimycin-promoted oxidant-induced extrareduction of b cytochromes. Addition of Zn2+ to reduced bc1 complex causes a red shift in the absorption spectrum of cytochrome b566 and a substantial decrease in the signal intensity of the EPR spectrum of the Fe-S protein. This is interpreted as an interaction of Zn2+ with the 2Fe-2S-cluster region of the Fe-S protein, thus giving rise to inhibition of the reductase activity and of the antimycin-insensitive reduction route of b cytochromes. A Scatchard-plot of 65Zn2+ binding to the native isolated complex gave a straight line from which a value of three binding sites and a single dissociation constant of 3 x 10(-6) M can be calculated, which is practically equal to the concentration causing 50% inhibition of electron flow.  相似文献   

9.
1. Cytochrome b-562 is more reduced in submitochondrial particles of mutant 28 during the aerobic steady-state respiration with succinate than in particles of the wild type. When anaerobiosis is reached, the reduction of cytochrome b is preceded by a rapid reoxidation in the mutnat. A similar reoxidation is observed in the wild type in the present of low concentrations of antimycin. 2. In contrast to the wild type, inhibition of electron transport in the mutant has a much higher antimycin titre than effects on cytochromes b (viz., aerobic steady-state reduction; reduction in the presence of substrate, cyanide and oxygen; the 'red shift' and lowering of E'-o of cytochrome b-562). Moreover, the titration curve of electron transport is hyperbolic whereas the curves for the reduction are sigmoidal. The conclusion is, that in both mutant and wild type, the actions of antimycin on electron transport and cytochromes b are separable. 3. The red shift in the mutant is more extensive than in the wild type. 4. Cytochrome b-558 and cytochrome b-566 (that absorbs in mutant and wild type at 564.5 nm) do not respond simultaneously to addition of antimycin, indicating that they are two separate cytochromes. 5. The difference between the effect of antimycin on electron transport and cytochromes b reduction is also found in intact cells of the mutant. 6. A model is suggested for the wild-type respiratory chain in which (i) the cytochromes b lie, in an uncoupled system, out of the main electron-transfer chain, (ii) antimycin induces a conformation change in QH-2-cytochrome c reductase resulting in effects on cytochrome b and inhibition of electron transport, (iii) a second antimycin-binding site with low affinity to the antibiotic is present, capable of inhibiting electron transport.  相似文献   

10.
Changes are described that are brought about by antimycin, NoHOQnO, funiculosin, myxothiazol and mucidin in the alpha-, beta- and gamma-absorption bands of reduced and oxidized cytochromes b in the isolated complex bc1 form beef heart mitochondria. The inhibitors can be divided into 2 groups. Antimycin, funiculosin and NoHOQnO are likely to shift the spectrum of b-562 and compete for specific binding with complex bc1, with each other but not with myxothiazol and mucidin. The spectral effects of the latter two inhibitors are more difficult to interpret and may involve contributions not only from b-562 but from b-566 as well. The existence of 2 independent inhibitor binding-sites in the complex bc1 corroborates the Q-cycle hypothesis.  相似文献   

11.
The respiratory bc1 complex transfers the electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c oxidase. Myxothiazol, strobilurin A (mucidin), and stigmatellin are center o inhibitors preventing electron transfer at the ubiquinone redox site Qo, which is located closer to the outer side of the inner mitochondrial membrane. The cytochrome b gene is carried by the organelle DNA. Yeast mutants resistant to myxothiazol and mucidin have been previously isolated and mapped to specific loci of the cytochrome b gene. In the present work, stigmatellin-resistant mutants were isolated and genetically analyzed. The mutated amino acid residues from seven myxothiazol-, four mucidin-, and six stigmatellin-resistant mutants have been identified by sequencing the relevant segments of the resistant cytochrome b gene. A third myxothiazol-resistant locus and the first stigmatellin-resistant locus were identified. The mutated codons were found to be clustered in two regions of the cytochrome b protein which appeared to be responsible for the resistance to Qo site inhibitors. The first region is within the end of the first, the second, and the beginning of the third exon whereas the second region is within exon five and the beginning of the sixth exon.  相似文献   

12.
Resolution and reconstitution has been used to examine the involvement of the iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome b-c1 segment in electron transfer reactions in this region of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The iron-sulfur protein is required for electron transfer from succinate and from ubiquinol to cytochrome c1. It is not required for reduction of cytochrome b under these conditions, but it is required for oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c plus cytochrome c oxidase. Removal of the iron-sulfur protein from the b-c1 complex prevents reduction of both cytochromes b and c1 by succinate or ubiquinol if antimycin is added to the depleted complex. As increasing amounts of iron-sulfur protein are reconstituted to the depleted complex, the amounts of cytochromes b and c1 reduced by succinate in the presence of antimycin increase and closely parallel the amounts of ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity restored to the reconstituted complex, measured before addition of antimycin. The function of the iron-sulfur protein in these oxidation-reduction reactions is consistent with a cyclic pathway of electron transfer through the cytochrome b-c1 complex, in which the iron-sulfur protein functions as a ubiquinol-cytochrome c1/ubisemiquinone-cytochrome b oxidoreductase.  相似文献   

13.
In uncoupled pig-heart mitochondria the rate of the reduction of duroquinone by succinate in the presence of cyanide is inhibited by about 50% by antimycin. This inhibition approaches completion when myxothiazol is also added or British anti-Lewisite-treated (BAL-treated) mitochondria are used. If mitochondria are replaced by isolated succinate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase, the inhibition by antimycin alone is complete. The reduction of a plastoquinone homologue with an isoprenoid side chain (plastoquinone-2) is strongly inhibited by antimycin with either mitochondria or succinate:cytochrome c reductase. The reduction by succinate of plastoquinone analogues with an n-alkyl side chain in the presence of mitochondria is inhibited neither by antimycin nor by myxothiazol, but is sensitive to the combined use of these two inhibitors. On the other hand, the reduction of the ubiquinone homologues Q2, Q4, Q6 and Q10 and an analogue, 2,3-dimethoxyl-5-n-decyl-6-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone, is not sensitive to any inhibitor of QH2:cytochrome c reductase tested or their combined use, either in normal or BAL-treated mitochondria or in isolated succinate:cytochrome c reductase. It is concluded that quinones with a ubiquinone ring can be reduced directly by succinate:Q reductase, whereas those with a plastoquinone ring can not. Reduction of the latter compounds requires participation of either center i or center o (Mitchell, P. (1975) FEBS Lett. 56, 1-6) or both, of QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase. It is proposed that a saturated side chain promotes, while an isoprenoid side chain prevents reduction of these compounds at center o.  相似文献   

14.
The reduction of duroquinone (DQ), 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl-6-decyl-1,4-benzoquinone (DB), and dichlorophenol indophenol (DCIP) by succinate and NADH was investigated in yeast mitochondria which have no spectrally detectable cytochrome b. Succinate reduces DB in the cytochrome b-deficient mitochondria at rates comparable to that observed in wild-type mitochondria, suggesting that succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase is unaffected by the lack of cytochrome b. In the mutant mitochondria, succinate does not reduce DQ or DCIP at significant rates; however, NADH reduces both DQ and DCIP at rates similar to that of the wild-type mitochondria in a myxothiazol, but not antimycin, sensitive reaction. The Ki for myxothiazol in this reaction is close to that for electron transfer through the cytochrome b-c1 complex. In addition, myxothiazol does not inhibit NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase. These results confirm our previous suggestion that the cytochrome b-c1 complex is involved in electron transfer from the primary dehydrogenases to DQ and DCIP and suggest that cytochrome b is not the binding site for myxothiazol.  相似文献   

15.
Antimycin, a specific and highly potent inhibitor of electron transfer in the cytochrome b-c1 segment of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, does not inhibit reduction of cytochrome c1 by succinate in isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase complex under conditions where the respiratory chain complex undergoes one oxidation-reduction turnover. If a slight molar excess of cytochrome c is added to the isolated reductase complex in the presence of antimycin, there is rapid reduction of one equivalent of c type cytochrome by succinate, after which reduction of the remaining c type cytochrome is inhibited. Antimycin fully inhibits succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity of isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase complex in which the b-c1 complex undergoes multiple turnovers in a catalytic fashion. In addition, when antimycin is added to isolated reductase complex in the presence of cytochrome c plus cytochrome c oxidase, the inhibitor causes a "crossover" in the steady state level of reduction of the cytochromes b and c1 comparable to this classical effect in mitochondria. On the basis of these results, it is suggested that linear schemes of electron transfer are not adequate to account for the site of antimycin inhibition and the mechanism of electron transfer in the cytochrome b-c1 segment of the respiratory chain. The effects of antimycin are consistent with cyclic electron transfer mechanisms such as the protonmotive Q cycle.  相似文献   

16.
A procedure is described for isolation of active ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) from potato tuber mitochondria using dodecyl maltoside extraction and ion exchange chromatography. The same procedure works well with mitochondria from red beet and sweet potato. The potato complex has at least 10 subunits resolvable by gel electrophoresis in the presence of dodecyl sulfate. The fifth subunit carries covalently bound heme. The two largest ("core") subunits either show heterogeneity or include a third subunit. The purified complex contains about 4 mumol of cytochrome c1, 8 mumol of cytochrome b, and 20 mumol of iron/g of protein. The complex is highly delipidated, with 1-6 mol of phospholipid and about 0.2 mol of ubiquinone/mol of cytochrome c1. Nonetheless it catalyzes electron transfer from a short chain ubiquinol analog to equine cytochrome c with a turnover number of 50-170 mol of cytochrome c reduced per mol of cytochrome c1 per s, as compared with approximately 220 in whole mitochondria. The enzymatic activity is stable for weeks at 4 degrees C in phosphate buffer and for months at -20 degrees C in 50% glycerol. The activity is inhibited by antimycin, myxothiazol, and funiculosin. The complex is more resistant to funiculosin and diuron than the beef heart enzyme. The optical difference spectra of the cytochromes were resolved by analysis of full-spectrum redox titrations. The alpha-band absorption maxima are 552 nm (cytochrome c1), 560 nm (cytochrome b-560), and 557.5 + 565.5 nm (cytochrome b-566, which has a split alpha-band). Extinction coefficients appropriate for the potato cytochromes are estimated. Despite the low lipid and ubiquinone content of the purified complex, the midpoint potentials of the cytochromes (257, 51, and -77 mV for cytochromes c1, b-560, and b-566, respectively) are not very different from values reported for whole mitochondria. EPR spectroscopy shows the presence of a Rieske-type iron sulfur center, and the absence of centers associated with succinate and NADH dehydrogenases. The complex shows characteristics associated with a Q-cycle mechanism of redox-driven proton translocation, including two pathways for reduction of b cytochromes by quinols and oxidant-induced reduction of b cytochromes in the presence of antimycin.  相似文献   

17.
When succinate oxidation by submitochondrial particles is blocked by antimycin, NoHOQnO or funiculosin, addition of ferricyanide restores oxygen uptake coupled to membrane potential generation. The effect of ferricyanide is abolished by mucidin or myxothiazol, as well as by KCN. The data strongly favor a cyclic redox loop mechanism in site 2 and show that either heme of the ferrous cytochrome b or ubisemiquinone formed in the QH2-oxidizing center of complex b-c1 is accessible to ferricyanide at the outer (M) side of the submitochondrial particle membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The role of subunit VII, the ubiquinone-binding protein of the cytochrome b-c1 complex, in electron transfer reactions was investigated in yeast mitochondria. Preincubation of submitochondrial particles with specific antibody against subunit VII prior to addition of either succinate, NADH, or the reduced form of the decyl analogue of ubiquinol resulted in an approximately 40% increase in the extent of cytochrome c1 reduction compared with controls containing preimmune serum. Addition of antimycin, an inhibitor of center i, to submitochondrial particles resulted in a 21% decrease in the rate and a 36% decrease in the extent of cytochrome c1 reduction by succinate. Preincubation of submitochondrial particles with the antibody against subunit VII prior to addition of antimycin resulted in an increase in both the rate and extent of cytochrome c1 reduction to the levels observed in the control without inhibitor. The addition of myxothiazol (an inhibitor of center o), myxothiazol plus antimycin, or alkyl hydroxynaphthoquinone (an inhibitor analogue of ubiquinone) resulted in an almost complete inhibition in both the rate and extent of cytochrome c1 reduction; however, preincubation with the antibody against subunit VII prior to addition of these inhibitors resulted in a significant increase in cytochrome c1 reduction. These results confirm our previous report (Japa, S., Zhu, Q. S., and Beattie, D. S. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 5441-5444) that subunit VII is involved in electron transfer reactions at center o of the b-c1 complex. We suggest that the binding of antibody to subunit VII inhibits the transfer of electrons to cytochrome b-566. Consequently, two electrons are transferred to the iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome c1 through an antimycin-insensitive pathway. Moreover, the antibody may change the conformation of subunit VII, such that the myxothiazol and hydroxynaphthoquinone binding sites are partially blocked thus permitting electron flow to cytochrome c1.  相似文献   

19.
1. In the presence of antimycin and KCN the reduction of cytochrome b in phosphorylating submitochondrial particles followed a biphasic first-order kinetics. The transition from the first, rapid phase to the second, slow phase occurred while the reduction of chtochromes c + c1 and a through or around the antimycin block was still linear with time. Thus, the phase transition was due to a fall-off in the rate of cytochrome b reduction. 2. The biphasic reduction of cytochrome b was observed over a wide temperature range (0--30 degrees C), with succinate of NADH as electron donors and with phosphorylating particles or coupled rat-heart mitochondria. With rat-heart mitochondria the same biphasic reduction was observed in the presence of either carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone or oligomycin. 3. In both the rapid and the slow phases, the rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 was equal to that of b-565. Thus both cytochromes b-561 and b-565 were affected by the mechanism which determined the reduction-rate. Furthermore, each of these cytochromes could be reduced individually with rate constants typical of the slow phase. 4. The proportion of rapidly reduced to slowly reduced cytochrome b was independent of the degree of its reducibility and could be controlled by teh experimental conditions. When antimycin was used as the only inhibitor, 96% of the b-type cytochromes were reduced in the rapid phase. If the c and a-type cytochromes were first reduced by ascorbate and tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine in the presence of KCN and antimycin, all the b-type cytochromes were fully reduced at the slow-rate. 5. With succinate, the rate of the rapid phase depended on the activation level of the succinic-dehydrogenase. The rate constant of the second phase was unaffected by the succinic dehydrogenase activity, if the preparation was more than 20% active. Furthermore, the rate constant of the slow reduction was the same with succinate, NADH, or even with durohydroquinone (which reacted directly with cytochromes b). 6. It is suggested that cytochrome b can exist in two forms: kinetically active or sluggish. The active form is rapidly reduced by the endogenous quinone (QH2) or durohydroquinone. The rate of the reduction of the active form by succinate or NADH is probably determined by the rate of the reduction of Q by the dehydrogenases. The second form of cytochrome b is characterized by its sluggish reduction by QH2 or durohydroquinone. 7. It is proposed that the transformation from the active to the sluggish form is induced by the reduction of a controlling group, named Y, located on the oxygen side of the antimycin inhibition site. When Y is oxidized, cytochrome b is in its active form, and when Y is reduced, cytochrome b is in its sluggish form. The nature of this kinetic control and a comparison with the mechanism controlling the reducibility of cytochrome b are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Illumination of chromatophore preparations from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides causes the oxidation of a cytochrome c and a slight oxidation of a cytochrome b with a maximum at 560nm. When illuminated in the presence of antimycin A the oxidation of cytochrome c was more pronounced and cytochrome b(560) was reduced; the dark oxidation of cytochrome b(560) was biphasic in the presence of succinate, but not in the presence of NADH, a less effective reductant. Split-beam spectroscopy showed that, in addition to the reduction of cytochrome b(560), another pigment with maxima at 565 and 537nm. was reduced and was more rapidly oxidized in the dark than cytochrome b(560). This pigment, tentatively identified as cytochrome b(565), was also detected in spectra at 77 degrees k, after brief illumination at room temperature; the maxima at 77 degrees k were at 562 and 536nm. In the absence of antimycin A, light caused a transient reduction of cytochrome b(565) and an oxidation of cytochrome b(560). Dark oxidation of b(565) was rapid, even in the presence of antimycin A and succinate. Difference spectra, at 77 degrees k, of ascorbate-reduced minus succinate-reduced chromatophores or of anaerobic succinate-reduced minus aerobic succinate-reduced chromatophores suggested that two cytochromes c were present, with maxima at 547 and 549nm. When chromatophores frozen at 77 degrees k were illuminated both these cytochromes c were oxidized, indicating a close association with the photochemical reaction centre. A scheme involving two reaction centres is proposed to explain these results.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号