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1.
The rate of reduction of cytochrome c by 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6,7-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropteridine was examined as a function of binding to liposomes prepared from mixed soybean phospholipids, asolectin, and from various purified phospholipids. Binding of cytochrome c to asolectin liposomes caused an increase in the rate of reduction by the pteridine derivative from 2900 to 16 000 M?1 · s?1 at pH 7. At low ionic strength (0.003 M) the binding stoichiometry between cytochrome c and asolectin vesicles is 15 ± 2 phosphospolipid/cytochrome c (mole ratio), determined by monitoring the change in reduction rate of cytochrome c by pteridine as cytochrome c is bound to the vesicles. A stoichiometry of 14 phospholipid/cytochrome c was obtained from gel filtration studies. Equilibrium association constants for the binding of cytochrome c to sites on the asolectin vesicles varied from 2.2 · 106 to 1.8 · 103 M?1 between 0.02 and 0.10 M ionic strength, respectively. In general, liposomes prepared from purified phospholipids resulted in less binding of cytochrome c per mole of phospholipid and lower reduction rates than those prepared from asolectin.  相似文献   

2.
Citrate and other polyanion binding to ferricytochrome c partially blocks reduction by ascorbate, but at constant ionic strength the citrate-cytochrome c complex remains reducible; reduction by TMPD is unaffected. At a constant high ionic strength citrate inhibits the cytochrome c oxidase reaction competitively with respect to cytochrome c, indicating that ferrocytochrome c also binds citrate, and that the citrate-ferrocytochrome c complex is rejected by the binding site at high ionic strength. At lower ionic strengths, citrate and other polyanions change the kinetic pattern of ferrocytochrome c oxidation from first-order towards zero-order, indicating preferential binding of the ferric species, followed by its exclusion from the binding site. The turnover at low cytochrome c concentrations is diminished by citrate but not the Km (apparent non-competitive inhibition) or the rate of cytochrome a reduction by bound cytochrome c. Small effects of anions are seen in direct measurements of binding to the primary site on the enzyme, and larger effects upon secondary site binding. It is concluded that anion-cytochrome c complexes may be catalytically competent but that the redox potentials and/or intramolecular behaviour of such complexes may be affected when enzyme-bound. Increasing ionic strength diminishes cytochrome c binding not only by decreasing the 'association' rate but also by increasing the 'dissociation' rate for bound cytochrome c converting the 'primary' (T) site at high salt concentrations into a site similar kinetically to the 'secondary' (L) site at low ionic strength. A finite Km of 170 microM at very high ionic strength indicates a ratio of K infinity m/K 0 M of about 5000. It is proposed that anions either modify the E10 of cytochrome C bound at the primary (T) site of that they perturb an equilibrium between two forms of bound c in favour of a less active form.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics and mechanism of the reduction of oxidized cytochrome c by ascorbate has been investigated in potassium nitrate, potassium 4-morpholineethanesulfonate (KMes), potassium sulfate and potassium ascorbate media. The results are consistent with simple second order electron transfer from ascorbate dianion to cytochrome c and do not support electron transfer from an ascorbate dianion bound to the protein of the cytochrome as recently proposed by Myer and Kumar. A rate constant of 8 X 10(5) M-1 X s-1 (25 degrees C, ionic strength, 0.1) was found for the electron-transfer step. This rate constant is essentially independent of the specific ions used in controlling ionic strength.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of complex formation between ferricytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase (Ferrocytochrome-c:hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.5) on the reduction of cytochrome c by N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD), reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulfate (PMSH), and ascorbate has been determined at low ionic strength (pH 7) and 25 degrees C. Complex formation with the peroxidase enhances the rate of ferricytochrome c reduction by the neutral reductants TMPD and PMSH. Under all experimental conditions investigated, complex formation with cytochrome c peroxidase inhibits the ascorbate reduction of ferricytochrome c. This inhibition is due to the unfavorable electrostatic interactions between the ascorbate dianion and the negatively charged cytochrome c-cytochrome c peroxidase complex. Corrections for the electrostatic term by extrapolating the data to infinite ionic strength suggest that ascorbate can reduce cytochrome c peroxidase-bound cytochrome c faster than free cytochrome c. Reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II by dicyanobis(1,10-phenanthroline)iron(II) (Fe(phen)2(CN)2) is essentially unaffected by complex formation between the enzyme and ferricytochrome c at low ionic strength (pH 6) and 25 degrees C. However, reduction of Compound II by the negatively changed tetracyano-(1,10-phenanthroline)iron(II) (Fe(phen)(CN)4) is enhanced in the presence of ferricytochrome c. This enhancement is due to the more favorable electrostatic interactions between the reductant and cytochrome c-cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II complex then for Compound II itself. These studies indicate that complex formation between cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase does not sterically block the electron-transfer pathways from these small nonphysiological reductants to the hemes in these two proteins.  相似文献   

5.
A fluorophore-nitroxide free radical dual-functional probe (FN) was utilized to study the kinetics of ascorbate (AH(-)) binding to Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA). Since the free radical fragment in the FN probe intramolecularly quenches fluorescence, ascorbate reduction of the nitroxide function is accompanied by a concomitant fluorescence intensity increase from the fluorophore. Thus, both fluorescence and the EPR techniques could be utilized to measure the reaction rate. In the presence of BSA protein, the observed rate of the overall process is the sum of that from at least two reactions: the reaction between free ascorbate and free probe, and the reaction between bound ascorbate and bound probe. Our findings show that the observed rate is strongly dependent on the ionic strength of the medium. A corollary of this observation is the indication of a purely electrostatic interaction between ascorbate and the BSA protein. This conclusion was further corroborated by 1H NMR measurement of the transverse relaxation time, T(2), of ascorbate protons in BSA solutions. Ascorbate ion was released from the ascorbate/BSA ensemble in the presence of increasing concentrations of NaCl. Binding constants of AH(-) to BSA were calculated at different ionic strengths at pH 7.4. Furthermore, an increase in ionic strength did not affect the ability of albumin to protect ascorbate against autoxidation. This suggests that the protein's protective antioxidant effect may be attributed to BSA binding of trace quantities of transition-metal cations (rather than ascorbate binding to BSA). This conclusion is supported by ascorbate UV-absorption measurements in the presence of albumin and Cu(2+) ions as a function of ionic strength.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of binding reduced tuna mitochondrial cytochrome c to negatively charged lipid bilayer vesicles at low ionic strength on the kinetics of electron transfer to various oxidants was studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Binding strongly stimulated (up to 100-fold) the rate of reaction with the positively charged cobalt phenanthroline ion, whereas the rate of reaction with the negatively charged ferricyanide ion was greatly inhibited (up to 60-fold), as compared with the same systems either at high ionic strength or at low ionic strength either in the presence of electrically neutral vesicles or in the absence of vesicles. Reactions of tuna cytochrome c with uncharged or electrically neutral oxidants such as benzoquinone and Rhodospirillum rubrum cytochrome c2 were unaffected by binding to vesicles, suggesting little or no effect of membrane association on cytochrome structure or accessibility of the heme center. The kinetic effects were largest at lower cytochrome c to vesicle ratios, where there was a greater degree of exposure of negatively charged regions on the membrane. The reduction of cobalt phenanthroline and ferricyanide by bound cytochrome c proceeded by nonexponential kinetics, as compared with the monophasic kinetics observed in the absence of vesicles. This was probably due to the heterogeneous distribution of vesicle sizes which exists at a given lipid to protein ratio. Nonlinear oxidant concentration dependencies were observed for cobalt phenanthroline oxidation of membrane-bound cytochrome c, consistent with a (minimal) two-step kinetic mechanism involving association of the oxidant with the membrane followed by electron transfer. Based on a comparison of second-order rate constants as a function of lipid to protein mole ratio, binding of cytochrome c to the bilayer increased the efficiency of the cobalt phenanthroline reaction by a factor of approximately 500 at the highest lipid:protein ratio used. The results suggest a mechanism involving attractive and repulsive electrostatic interactions between the negatively charged bilayer and the electrically charged oxidants, which increase or decrease their effective concentrations at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

7.
Yeast ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase is still active after inactivation of the genes encoding the 40 kDa Core II protein or the 17 kDa subunit VI (Oudshoorn et al. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 163, 97-103 and Schoppink et al. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 173, 115-122). The steady-state levels of several other subunits of Complex III are severely reduced in the 40 kDa0 mutant. The level of spectrally detectable Complex III cytochrome b in the mutant submitochondrial particles is about 5% of that of the wild type. However, when the steady-state activity of Complex III with respect to the cytochrome c reduction was examined, similar maximal turnover numbers and Km values were found for the mutated and the wild-type complexes, both when yeast cytochrome c and when horse-heart cytochrome c was used as electron acceptor. We therefore conclude that the Core II subunit of yeast Complex III plays no role in the binding of cytochrome c and that it has no major influence of the overall electron transport and on the binding of ubiquinol by the enzyme. Absence of the 17 kDa subunit VI of yeast Complex III, the homologous counterpart of the hinge protein of the bovine heart enzyme, resulted in a decrease in the rate of reduction of both horse-heart cytochrome c and yeast cytochrome c by Complex III under conditions of relatively high ionic strength. However, under conditions of optimal ionic strength, no difference could be seen in the maximal turnover numbers and Km values, neither with horse-heart cytochrome c nor with yeast cytochrome c between Complex III deficient in the 17 kDa protein and the wild-type complex. Binding of ATP to ferricytochrome c inhibits its reduction by Complex III under conditions of relatively high ionic strength. But when the 17 kDa protein is absent, this inhibition is also observed under optimal ionic-strength conditions. These results can be explained by assuming a stimulating role for the acidic 17 kDa protein in the association of basic cytochrome c with Complex III. This association is (part of) the rate-limiting step in the reduction of cytochrome c by Complex III under conditions of relatively high ionic strength or when this association is hindered, for instance, by binding of ATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
A multiprotein complex which contains in equimolar amounts two cytochromes b (Mr each about 27,000), one cytochrome c1 (Mr 31,000) and six subunits without known prosthetic groups (Mr 8000, 12,000, 14,000, 45,000, 45,000, and 50,000) has been isolated from the mitochondrial membranes of Neurospora crassa by affinity chromatography on immobilized cytochrome c. The chromatographic separation was based upon the specific binding of the complex to ferricytochrome c coupled to Sepharose and its specific release upon conversion of the coupled ferricytochrome c into ferrocytochrome c using ascorbate as a reductant. The chromatography was performed in the presence of the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 at low ionic strengths. A monodisperse preparation of the multiprotein complex was obtained which was used for binding studies with cytochrome c from Neurospora crassa, horse heart and Saccaromyces cerevisiae. At low ionic strength (20 mM Trisacetate) and slightly alkaline pH (pH 7 to 8), more than one molecule of ferricytochrome c were bound to the isolated multiprotein complex with dissociation constants below 1 x 10(-7) M. One of these bindings appeared different from the others, since its high affinity was preserved at an ionic strength at which the affinities of the other bindings decreased. Furthermore, the affinity of only this binding decreased upon reduction of cytochrome c. It is suggested that this binding is at or near the functionally active site(s) of the mulipprotein complex.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction of cytochrome c with electron carriers in intact and damaged (with destroyed outer membrane) rat liver mitochondria was studied. It was shown that the increase in ionic strength causes changes in the respiration rate of damaged mitochondria due to the reduction of the cytochrome c affinity for its binding sites in the organelles. This suggests that cytochrome c concentration in the intermembrane space of intact mitochondria is increased by salts, whereas the increase in ionic strength has a slight influence on the rates of succinate oxidase and external rotenone-insensitive NADH-oxidase of intact mitochondria. At low ionic strength values, the Michaelis constant (KM) value of external NADH-oxidase for cytochrome c exceeds by one order of magnitude that for succinate oxidase, while the maximal activity of these two systems is nearly the same. The increase in ionic strength causes an increase in the KM value for both oxidases. Interaction of cytochrome c with mitochondrial proteins was modelled by cytochrome c interaction with cibacron-dextran anions. It was concluded that the ionic strength-sensitive electrostatic interactions play a decisive role in cytochrome c binding to electron carriers in mitochondrial membranes. However, cytochrome c content and its binding parameters in intact-mitochondrial membranes prevent the latent activity of external NADH oxidase to be revealed in intact mitochondria after the increase in the ionic strength of the surrounding medium.  相似文献   

10.
The reduction of cytochrome c by succinate-cytochrome c reductase was studied at very low cytochrome c concentrations where the reaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c was rate limiting. The rate constant for the reaction was found to be independent of ionic strength up to 0.1 M chloride, and to decrease rapidly at higher ionic strength, suggesting that the interaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c was primarily electrostatic. The reaction rates of cytochrome c derivatives modified at single lysine residues to form trifluoroacetylated or trifluoromethylphenylcarbamylated cytochromes c were studied to determine the role of individual lysines in the reaction. None of the modifications affected the reaction at low ionic strength, but at higher ionic strength the reaction rate was substantially decreased by modification of those lysines surrounding the heme crevice, lysine-8, -13, -27, -72, and -79. Modification of lysine-22, -25, -55, -99, and -100 had no effect on the rate. These results indicate that the binding site on cytochrome c for cytochrome c1 overlaps considerably with that for cytochrome oxidase, suggesting that cytochrome c might undergo some type of rotational diffusion during the electron-transport process.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c form a noncovalent electron transfer complex in the course of the peroxidase-catalyzed reduction of H2O2. The two hemoproteins were cross-linked in 40% yield to a covalent 1:1 complex with the aid of 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The covalent complex was found to be a valid model of the noncovalent electron transfer complex for the following reasons. The covalent complex had only 5% residual peroxidase activity toward exogeneous ferrocytochrome c indicating that the cross-linked cytochrome c covers the electron-accepting site of cytochrome c peroxidase. The residual peroxidase activity was almost independent of ionic strength indicating that the electron-accepting site is much less accessible even when ionic bonds between the two cross-linked hemoproteins are severed. The rate of reduction of heme c by ascorbate is 15 times slower in the covalent complex than in free cytochrome c and is independent of ionic strength. Although the covalent complex may not have been entirely pure with respect to the number and location of the cross-links, two major cross-links could be localized to within a few residues. One is from Lys 13 of cytochrome c to an acidic residue in positions 32, 33, 34, 35, or 37 of cytochrome c peroxidase, the other from Lys 86 of cytochrome c to a carboxyl group in the same cluster of acidic residues. The result stresses the importance of a peculiar stretch of acidic residues of cytochrome c peroxidase and of Lys 13 and 86 of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of electron transfer catalyzed by cytochrome oxidase was investigated by monitoring the reaction of cytochrome oxidase with cytochrome c under carefully controlled anaerobic conditions. The kinetics of the reaction were examined by varying conditions of ionic strength, inhibitor binding, and oxidation-reduction potential. An analogue of cytochrome c in which the iron atom was replaced with cobalt was used to probe the effect of redox potential on the reaction. Under conditions of low ionic strength, there is very rapid oxidation of cytochrome c and reduction of oxidase which occurs at a rate of 3 X 10(7) M-1 s-1. The number of electrons transferred exhibit a hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of cytochrome c reaching a maximum of 2 electrons transferred at the highest concentration of reduced cytochrome c employed. The total number of electrons transferred was always observed to be distributed equally between cytochrome a and a second acceptor which appears to be the associated copper center; electron transfer to cytochrome a3 did not occur in the absence of oxygen. Substitution of cytochrome c by the cobalt analogue (which represents a decrease in oxidation-reduction potential of about 400 mV) yielded identical results indicating that the origin of the lack of reactivity of cytochrome a3 is of a kinetic nature. The effect of increasing the ionic strength on the reaction was 2-fold: a marked decrease in reaction rate and the appearance of biphasic kinetics with the amplitude of the very fast absorbance changes at 605 nm decreasing from 80% to 40% of the total anticipated from static absorbance measurements. Each of the two phases accounted for a maximum of 1 electron at the highest ionic strength employed. These results are simulated in terms of a sample kinetic reaction scheme involving a two-step electron transfer at one binding site.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation-reduction reactions and structural characteristics of phosvitin-bound cytochrome c were examined at various ratios of cytochrome c to phosvitin. At binding ratios below half the maximum, the rate constants for the oxidation reactions with cytochrome c oxidase and ferricyanide and the rate constants for the reduction reactions with cytochrome b2 and ascorbate were low, but at higher ratios these rate constants gradually increased to that of free cytochrome c and, in particular, the rate constant for oxidation by cytochrome c oxidase was raised to two to three times that of the free form. This binding-ratio dependence of the rate constants for the oxidation and reduction reactions was different from that of the net charge of the cytochrome c-phosvitin complex, implying that the negative charges of phosvitin are unlikely to modulate the rates. In contrast, the broadening of the NMR signals for the heme and methionine-80 methyl groups and the conformational transition in the vicinity of the heme moiety on change from the native to the cyanide-bound or urea-denatured form of cytochrome c showed a similar binding-ratio dependence to the rate constants for the oxidation and reduction reactions. Since the conformation and electronic structure in the heme environment of ferric and ferrous cytochromes c were not changed significantly by binding to phosvitin, and since the binding strength of cytochrome c to phosvitin at binding ratios below half the maximum is different from that at higher ratios, these findings suggest that a difference in the movement of cytochrome c in its complex with phosvitin may modulate its oxidation-reduction reactions.  相似文献   

14.
The relationship between the structure and function of ferricytochrome c bound to the phosphoprotein phosvitin was investigated. The rates of reduction of phosvitin-bound ferricytochrome c by cytochrome b2, ascorbate and the superoxide radical generated by xanthine oxidase wer repressed where the binding ratio was less than half the maximum, but at higher ratios they were restored gradually with increase in the ratio. The affinity of cytochrome b2 for cytochrome c was not affected by binding of cytochrome c to phosvitin. The redox potential of the bond form was lower than that of the free form and only decreased with decrease in the ratio. The conformatin around the heme moiety and the electronic structure of the heme group of bound ferricytochrome c were similar to those of free ferricytochrome c, but the conformational stability in the vicinity of the prosthetic group was related to the binding ratio as ratios above half the maximum and was well correlated with the reduction rate. Since the binding of cytochrome c to phosvitin is much stronger at binding ratios below half the maximum, these results suggest that this binding strength exclusively affects the conformational flexibility of the heme crevice in the cytochrome molecule, thus altering the reduction rate.  相似文献   

15.
The photoreactive fluorescent probe, 3-azidonaphthalene-2,7-disulfonic acid (ANDS) was encapsulated in the inner aqueous compartment of small unilamellar liposomes, prepared from egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) +/- 20 mol% dihexadecylphosphate (DHP). After adding cytochrome c externally to a suspension of these vesicles, the probe was activated by ultraviolet irradiation, and the protein was separated from the lipids. When negatively charged (egg PC/DHP) vesicles at low ionic strength were used, which form an electrostatic complex with cytochrome c, the protein was labeled by ANDS. This process depended on irradiation time, and was inhibited by increasing the ionic strength of the medium. Labeling was not observed with isoelectric (egg PC) vesicles. These observations suggest that electrostatic binding of cytochrome c to the bilayer is accompanied by intramembrane penetration to such a depth that the protein can communicate with the inner membrane-water interface.  相似文献   

16.
Investigations into the nature of the axial heme ligands, the strength of the heme crevice, the reactivity with cyanide, and the ascorbate reducibility of cytochrome c1 were performed to explore structure-function relationships of cytochrome c1. The existence of an absorbance band at 690 nm, which was quenched by raising the pH with a pK of 9.2 corresponding to a low spin-low transition, suggested that a methionine residue probably functioned as one of the axial heme iron ligands in this cytochrome. Spectral titrations of cytochrome c1 in the low pH range showed a markedly elevated pK for the low spin-high spin transition relative to cytochrome c. Denaturation studies with urea, the absence of any reaction with cyanide, and the evidence from other lines would appear to indicate that the heme group of cytochrome c1 was reduced by ascorbate at approximately 5% of the rate of reduction of cytochrome c but this rate dramatically increased with increasing pH concomitant with the disappearance of the 690 nm absorbance band. Circular dichroic spectra substantiated that elevated pH produced conformational changes localized to the heme crevice and probably also the regions containing aromatic residues. The enhanced rate of ascorbate reduction was perhaps a consequence of the increased accessibility of the heme iron to ascorbate. Major unfolding of the protein in 8 M urea, however, completely abolished the ascorbate reducibility of cytochrome c1. The buried nature of the heme group of cytochrome c1 would probably preclude transfer of an electron from cytochrome c1 to cytochrome c through a direct Fe-Fe or a heme-heme interaction. This poses an important question concerning the mechanism of this electron transfer between these two cytochromes not only in mitochondria but also in solution.  相似文献   

17.
The ion binding properties of horse, bovine, and tuna cytochrome c (both oxidized and reduced) have been measured using a combination of ultrafiltration, neutron activation, and ion chromatography. The ions investigated were chloride, phosphate, and Tris-cacodylate. Ion chromatography and neutron activation analysis techniques were employed to determine the concentration of free anions. Binding constants are obtained from modified Scatchard plots (in the range of 10-2000 M-1). The redox potentials for cytochrome c at different ionic strengths, pH 7.0, have been determined. In this paper we report the ionic strength and ion binding effects on the redox properties of horse, bovine, and tuna cytochrome c. Potential versus ionic strength dependence for horse, bovine, and tuna cytochrome c from the experimental data were compared with a theoretical model.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Cytochrome c (horse heart) was covalently linked to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by using the cleavable bifunctional reagent dithiobis-succinimidyl propionate in 5 mM-sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. A cross-linked complex of molecular weight 48 000 was purified in approx. 10% yield from the reaction mixture, which contained 1 mol of cytochrome c and 1 mol of cytochrome c peroxidase/mol. Of the total 40 lysine residues, four to six were blocked by the cross-linking agent. Dithiobis-succinimidylpropionate can also cross-link cytochrome c to ovalbumin, but cytochrome c peroxidase is the preferred partner for cytochrome c in a mixture of the three proteins. The cytochrome c cross-linked to the peroxidase can be rapidly reduced by free cytochrome c-557 from Crithidia oncopelti, and the equilibrium obtained can be used to calculate a mid-point oxidation-reduction potential for the cross-linked cytochrome of 243 mV. Mitochondrial NADH-cytochrome c reductase will reduce the bound cytochrome only very slowly, but the rate of reduction by ascorbate at high ionic strength approaches that for free cytochrome c. Bound cytochrome c reduced by ascorbate can be re-oxidized within 10s by the associated peroxidase in the presence of equimolar H2O2. In the standard peroxidase assay the cross-linked complex shows 40% of the activity of the free peroxidase. Thus the intrinsic ability of each partner in the complex to take part in electron transfer is retained, but the stable association of the two proteins affects access of reductants.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of electrostatically binding ferrous cytochrome c to anionic liposomes, composed of dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (DMPG-), dioleoyl phosphatidyl-glycerol (DOPG-), or cardiolipin (CL2-) mixed with varying amounts of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC), on the kinetics of cytochrome oxidation by the positively charged cobalt phenanthroline ion has been measured using stopped-flow spectrophotometry. The rate of electron transfer is enhanced as much as 3000-fold by increasing the number of negatively charged binding sites on the liposome surface, and by as much as 1000-fold by decreasing the ionic strength of the buffer. The sigmoidal shape of the curve of rate constant vs mole percent anionic lipid is consistent with a positively cooperative effect of the negative surface charge. The rate stimulation is greater for DOPG(-)- and CL2(-)-containing liposomes than for DMPG- vesicles; this is most likely due to structural differences in the respective liposomes. The results do not provide any support for a role of structural changes in the bound cytochrome in influencing oxidation kinetics, a possibility suggested by recent spectroscopic measurements, although relatively small conformational effects cannot be completely ruled out.  相似文献   

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