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1.
The qpo gene of Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans encodes a triheme c -containing membrane-bound enzyme, quinol peroxidase (QPO) that catalyzes peroxidation reaction in the respiratory chain and uses quinol as the physiological electron donor. The QPO of A. actinomycetemcomitans is the only characterized QPO, but homologues of the qpo gene are widely distributed among many gram-negative bacteria, including Haemophils ducreii, Bacteroides fragilis , and Escherichia coli . One-third of the amino acid sequence of QPO from the N-terminal end is unique, whereas two-thirds of the sequence from the C-terminal end exhibits high homology with the sequence of the diheme bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase. In order to obtain sufficient protein for biophysical studies, the present study aimed to overproduce recombinant QPO (rQPO) from A. actinomycetemcomitans in E. coli . Coexpression of qpo with E. coli cytochrome c maturation ( ccm ) genes resulted in the expression of an active QPO with a high yield. Using purified rQPO, we determined the midpoint reduction potentials of the three heme molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans is an oral pathogen causing localized aggressive periodontitis (LAP). Recently, we characterized for the first time a quinol peroxidase (QPO) that catalyzes peroxidase activity using quinol in the respiratory chain of A. actinomycetemcomitans for the reduction of hydrogen peroxide. In the present study, we characterized the phenotype of a QPO null mutant. The QPO null mutant shows an oxidative stress phenotype, suggesting that QPO plays a certain role in scavenging endogenously generated reactive oxygen species. Notably, we discovered that the QPO null mutant exhibits a production defect of leukotoxin (LtxA), which is a secreted bacterial toxin and is known to target human leukocytes and erythrocytes. This result suggests that QPO would be considered as a potential drug target to inhibit the expression of LtxA from A. actinomycetemcomitans for the treatment and prevention of LAP.  相似文献   

3.
Evidence for the presence of a quinol oxidase super-complex composed of a cytochrome bc1 complex and cytochrome oxidase in the respiratory chain of a Gram-positive thermophilic bacterium PS3 is reported. On incubation with an octyl glucoside-solubilized fraction of the total membranes of PS3 anti-serum against PS3 cytochrome oxidase gave an immunoprecipitate that showed both quinol-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome c oxidase activities. When the cholate-deoxycholate and LiCl-treated membranes of PS3 were solubilized and subjected to ion-exchange chromatography in the presence of octaethyleneglycol dodecyl ether, most of the A-, B-, and C-type cytochromes were copurified as a peak having both quinol-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome oxidase activities. The immunoprecipitate and quinol oxidase preparation contained hemes a, b, and c in a ratio of about 2:2:3, indicating the presence of one-to-one complex of cytochrome oxidase containing 2 hemes a and one heme c, and a bc1 complex containing 2 hemes b and 2 hemes c. Gel electrophoresis in the presence of dodecyl sulfate showed that the immunoprecipitate and quinol oxidase preparation were composed of seven subunits; those of 51 (56-kDa), 38, and 22 kDa for cytochrome oxidase and those of 29, 23, 21, and 14 kDa for the bc1 complex. The 38-, 29-, and 21 kDa components possessed covalently bound heme c. The apparent molecular mass of the super complex was estimated to be as 380 kDa by gel filtration.  相似文献   

4.
ABSTRACT A study of the effect of respiratory inhibitors on O2 uptake of Euglena gracilis mitochondria, isolated from cells grown in the presence of cyanide or with ethanol as carbon source, was undertaken. The contents of cytochrome c oxidase and alternative oxidase were also determined. Inhibition of respiration by antimycin and cyanide was only partial and it was dependent on the oxidizable substrate used. Succinate oxidation was the most sensitive to cyanide whereas lactate oxidation was the most resistant. Cell growth in the presence of cyanide or with ethanol as carbon source brought about an enhanced content of alternative oxidase without a concomitant increase in cytochrome aa3 content. However, a correlation between cyanide-resistant respiration and alternative oxidase content was not found. Analysis of heme types in mitochondrial membranes revealed the absence of heme O. The data suggest the presence of an inducible alternative oxidase in Euglena mitochondria which has high resistance to cyanide and contains heme B. A close relationship between Euglena alternative oxidase and bacterial quinol oxidases containing B-type heme is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane-bound cytochrome c quinol dehydrogenases play a crucial role in bacterial respiration by oxidizing menaquinol and transferring electrons to various periplasmic oxidoreductases. In this work, the menaquinol oxidation site of NrfH was characterized by the determination of the X-ray structure of Desulfovibrio vulgaris NrfHA nitrite reductase complex bound to 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, which is shown to act as a competitive inhibitor of NrfH quinol oxidation activity. The structure, at 2.8-Å resolution, reveals that the inhibitor binds close to NrfH heme 1, where it establishes polar contacts with two essential residues: Asp89, the residue occupying the heme distal ligand position, and Lys82, a strictly conserved residue. The menaquinol binding cavity is largely polar and has a wide opening to the protein surface. Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the quinol binding site of NrfH and several other respiratory enzymes lie in the head group region of the membrane, which probably facilitates proton transfer to the periplasm. Although NrfH is not a multi-span membrane protein, its quinol binding site has several characteristics similar to those of quinone binding sites previously described. The data presented here provide the first characterization of the quinol binding site of the cytochrome c quinol dehydrogenase family.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidation of membrane-bound quinol molecules is a central step in the respiratory electron transport chains used by biological cells to generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. A novel family of cytochrome c quinol dehydrogenases that play an important role in bacterial respiratory chains was recognised in recent years. Here, we describe the first structure of a cytochrome from this family, NrfH from Desulfovibrio vulgaris, which forms a stable complex with its electron partner, the cytochrome c nitrite reductase NrfA. One NrfH molecule interacts with one NrfA dimer in an asymmetrical manner, forming a large membrane-bound complex with an overall alpha(4)beta(2) quaternary arrangement. The menaquinol-interacting NrfH haem is pentacoordinated, bound by a methionine from the CXXCHXM sequence, with an aspartate residue occupying the distal position. The NrfH haem that transfers electrons to NrfA has a lysine residue from the closest NrfA molecule as distal ligand. A likely menaquinol binding site, containing several conserved and essential residues, is identified.  相似文献   

7.
The aerobic respiratory system of Bacillus subtilis 168 is known to contain three terminal oxidases: cytochrome caa(3), which is a cytochrome c oxidase, and cytochrome aa(3) and bd, which are quinol oxidases. The presence of a possible fourth oxidase in the bacterium was investigated using a constructed mutant, LUH27, that lacks the aa(3) and caa(3) terminal oxidases and is also deficient in succinate:menaquinone oxidoreductase. The cytochrome bd content of LUH27 can be varied by using different growth conditions. LUH27 membranes virtually devoid of cytochrome bd respired with NADH or exogenous quinol as actively as preparations containing 0.4 nmol of cytochrome bd/mg of protein but were more sensitive to cyanide and aurachin D. The reduced minus oxidized difference spectra of the bd-deficient membranes as well as absorption changes induced by CO and cyanide indicated the presence of a "cytochrome o"-like component; however, the membranes did not contain heme O. The results provide strong evidence for the presence of a terminal oxidase of the bb' type in B. subtilis. The enzyme does not pump protons and combines with CO much faster than typical heme-copper oxidases; in these respects, it resembles a cytochrome bd rather than members of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily. The genome sequence of B. subtilis 168 contains gene clusters for four respiratory oxidases. Two of these clusters, cta and qox, are deleted in LUH27. The remaining two, cydAB and ythAB, encode the identified cytochrome bd and a putative second cytochrome bd, respectively. Deletion of ythAB in strain LUH27 or the presence of the yth genes on plasmid did not affect the expression of the bb' oxidase. It is concluded that the novel bb'-type oxidase probably is cytochrome bd encoded by the cyd locus but with heme D being substituted by high spin heme B at the oxygen reactive site, i.e. cytochrome b(558)b(595)b'.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome bd is one of the two terminal quinol oxidases in the respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. The enzyme catalyzes charge separation across the bacterial membrane during the oxidation of quinols by dioxygen but does not pump protons. In this work, the reaction of cytochrome bd with O(2) and related reactions has been studied by time-resolved spectrophotometric and electrometric methods. Oxidation of the fully reduced enzyme by oxygen is accompanied by rapid generation of membrane potential (delta psi, negative inside the vesicles) that can be described by a two-step sequence of (i) an initial oxygen concentration-dependent, electrically silent, process (lag phase) corresponding to the formation of a ferrous oxy compound of heme d and (ii) a subsequent monoexponential electrogenic phase with a time constant <60 mus that matches the formation of ferryl-oxo heme d, the product of the reaction of O(2) with the 3-electron reduced enzyme. No evidence for generation of an intermediate analogous to the "peroxy" species of heme-copper oxidases could be obtained in either electrometric or spectrophotometric measurements of cytochrome bd oxidation or in a spectrophotometric study of the reaction of H(2)O(2) with the oxidized enzyme. Backflow of electrons upon flash photolysis of the singly reduced CO complex of cytochrome bd leads to transient generation of a delta psi of the opposite polarity (positive inside the vesicles) concurrent with electron flow from heme d to heme b(558) and backward. The amplitude of the delta psi produced by the backflow process, when normalized to the reaction yield, is close to that observed in the direct reaction during the reaction of fully reduced cytochrome bd with O(2) and is apparently associated with full transmembrane translocation of approximately one charge.  相似文献   

9.
Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c2 (cyt c2) is a member of the heme-containing cytochrome c protein family that is found in the periplasmic space of this gram-negative bacterium. This exported polypeptide is made as a higher-molecular-weight precursor with a typical procaryotic signal peptide. Therefore, cyt c2 maturation is normally expected to involve precursor translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane, cleavage of the signal peptide, and covalent heme attachment. Surprisingly, synthesis as a precursor polypeptide is not a prerequisite for cyt c2 maturation because deleting the entire signal peptide does not prevent export, heme attachment, or function. Although cytochrome levels were reduced about threefold in cells containing this mutant protein, steady-state cyt c2 levels were significantly higher than those of other exported bacterial polypeptides which contain analogous signal peptide deletions. Thus, this mutant protein has the unique ability to be translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane in the absence of a signal peptide. The covalent association of heme with this mutant protein also suggests that the signal peptide is not required for ligand attachment to the polypeptide chain. These results have uncovered some novel aspects of bacterial c-type cytochrome biosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Pseudoazurin binds at a single site on cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus with a K(d) of 16.4 microM at 25 degrees C, pH 6.0, in an endothermic reaction that is driven by a large entropy change. Sedimentation velocity experiments confirmed the presence of a single site, although results at higher pseudoazurin concentrations are complicated by the dimerization of the protein. Microcalorimetry, ultracentrifugation, and (1)H NMR spectroscopy studies in which cytochrome c550, pseudoazurin, and cytochrome c peroxidase were all present could be modeled using a competitive binding algorithm. Molecular docking simulation of the binding of pseudoazurin to the peroxidase in combination with the chemical shift perturbation pattern for pseudoazurin in the presence of the peroxidase revealed a group of solutions that were situated close to the electron-transferring heme with Cu-Fe distances of about 14 A. This is consistent with the results of (1)H NMR spectroscopy, which showed that pseudoazurin binds closely enough to the electron-transferring heme of the peroxidase to perturb its set of heme methyl resonances. We conclude that cytochrome c550 and pseudoazurin bind at the same site on the cytochrome c peroxidase and that the pair of electrons required to restore the enzyme to its active state after turnover are delivered one-by-one to the electron-transferring heme.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex is one of two terminal oxidases which are components of the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. This membrane-bound enzyme catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol and the four-electron reduction of oxygen to water. Enzyme turnover generates proton and voltage gradients across the bilayer. The oxidase is a heterodimer containing 2 mol of protoheme IX and 1 or 2 mol of heme d per mol of complex. To explain the functional properties of the enzyme, a simple model has been proposed in which it is speculated that the heme prosthetic groups define two separate active sites on opposite sides of the membrane at which the oxidation of quinol and the reduction of water, respectively, are catalyzed. This paper represents an initial effort to define the axial ligands of each of the three or four hemes within the amino acid sequence of the oxidase subunits. Each of the 10 histidine residues has been altered by site-directed mutagenesis with the expectation that histidine residues are likely candidates for heme ligands. Eight of the 10 histidine residues are not essential for enzyme activity, and 2 appear to function as heme axial ligands. Histidine 186 in subunit I is required for the cytochrome b558 component of the enzyme. This residue is likely to be located near the periplasmic surface of the membrane. Histidine 19, near the amino terminus of subunit I also appears to be a heme ligand. It is concluded that two of the four or five expected heme axial ligands have been tentatively identified, although further work is required to confirm these conclusions. A minimum of two additional axial ligands must be residues other than histidine.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract Membranes of the extremely thermoacidophilic archaeon Desulfurolobus ambivalens grown under aerobic conditions contain a quinol oxidase of the cytochrome aa 3-type as the most prominent hemoprotein. The partially purified enzyme consists of three polypeptide subunits with apparent molecular masses of 40, 27 and 20 kDa and contains two heme A molecules and one copper atom. CO difference spectra suggest one heme to be a heme a 3-centre. The EPR spectra indicate the presence of a low-spin and a high-spin heme species. Redox titrations of the solubilized enzyme show the presence of two reduction processes, with apparent potentials of + 235 and + 330 mV. The enzyme cannot oxidize reduced cytochrome c , but rather serves as an oxidase of caldariella quinone. Due to their very simple composition, D . ambivalens cell appear as a promising candidate to study Structure-function relationships of cytochrome aa 3 in the integral membrane state.  相似文献   

14.
Electrophoresis of a Corynebacterium glutamicum membrane preparation in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, followed by staining for peroxidase activity (heme staining), showed only one band at about 28 kDa. This 28 kDa protein was purified from C. glutamicum membranes by chromatography in the presence of decylglucoside using DEAE-Toyopearl and hydroxylapatite columns, as the sole c-type cytochrome in the bacterium. The cytochrome showed an alpha band at 551 nm, and its E(m, 7) was about 210 mV. A QcrCAB operon encoding the subunits of a putative quinol cytochrome c reductase was found 3'-downstream of ctaE encoding subunit III of cytochrome aa(3) in the C. glutamicum genome. The deduced amino acid sequence of qcrC, composed of 283 amino acid residues, contained two heme C-binding motifs and was in agreement with partial peptide sequences obtained from the 28 kDa protein after V8 protease digestion. We propose to name this protein cytochrome cc. The presence of cytochrome cc is a common feature of high G+C content Gram-positive bacteria, since we could confirm this protein by electrophoresis; homologous QcrCAB operons are also known in Mycobacterium and Streptomyces. QcrA and qcrB of C. glutamicum encode the Rieske Fe-S protein and cytochrome b, respectively, although these proteins were not co-purified with cytochrome cc. The phylogenetic tree of cytochromes b and b(6) show that C. glutamicum cytochrome b, along with those of other bacteria in the high G+C group, is rather different from the Bacillus counterparts, but highly similar to the Deinococci and Thermus cytochromes. This indicates that there is a fourth group of bacteria in addition to the three clades: proteobacterial cytochrome b, cyanobacterial b(6) and green sulfur-low G+C Gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

15.
The aerobic respiratory chain of the Gram-positive Corynebacterium glutamicum involves a bc(1) complex with a diheme cytochrome c(1) and a cytochrome aa(3) oxidase but no additional c-type cytochromes. Here we show that the two enzymes form a supercomplex, because affinity chromatography of either strep-tagged cytochrome b (QcrB) or strep-tagged subunit I (CtaD) of cytochrome aa(3) always resulted in the copurification of the subunits of the bc(1) complex (QcrA, QcrB, QcrC) and the aa(3) complex (CtaD, CtaC, CtaE). The isolated bc(1)-aa(3) supercomplexes had quinol oxidase activity, indicating functional electron transfer between cytochrome c(1) and the Cu(A) center of cytochrome aa(3). Besides the known bc(1) and aa(3) subunits, few additional proteins were copurified, one of which (CtaF) was identified as a fourth subunit of cytochrome aa(3). If either of the two CXXCH motifs for covalent heme attachment in cytochrome c(1) was changed to SXXSH, the resulting mutants showed severe growth defects, had no detectable c-type cytochrome, and their cytochrome b level was strongly reduced. This indicates that the attachment of both heme groups to apo-cytochrome c(1) is not only required for the activity but also for the assembly and/or stability of the bc(1) complex.  相似文献   

16.
Except for its redox properties, cytochrome c is an inert protein. However, dissociation of the bond between methionine-80 and the heme iron converts the cytochrome into a peroxidase. Dissociation is accomplished by subjecting the cytochrome to various conditions, including proteolysis and hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2))-mediated oxidation. In affected cells of various neurological diseases, including Parkinson's disease, cytochrome c is released from the mitochondrial membrane and enters the cytosol. In the cytosol cytochrome c is exposed to cellular proteases and to H(2)O(2) produced by dysfunctional mitochondria and activated microglial cells. These could promote the formation of the peroxidase form of cytochrome c. In this study we investigated the catalytic and cytolytic properties of the peroxidase form of cytochrome c. These properties are qualitatively similar to those of other heme-containing peroxidases. Dopamine as well as sulfhydryl group-containing metabolites, including reduced glutathione and coenzyme A, are readily oxidized in the presence of H(2)O(2). This peroxidase also has cytolytic properties similar to myeloperoxidase, lactoperoxidase, and horseradish peroxidase. Cytolysis is inhibited by various reducing agents, including dopamine. Our data show that the peroxidase form of cytochrome c has catalytic and cytolytic properties that could account for at least some of the damage that leads to neuronal death in the parkinsonian brain.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome bd is one of the two quinol oxidases in the respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. The enzyme contains three heme prosthetic groups. The dioxygen binding site is heme d, which is thought to be part of the heme-heme binuclear center along with heme b(595), which is a high-spin heme whose function is not known. Protein sequence alignments [Osborne, J. P., and Gennis, R. B. (1999) Biochim. Biophys Acta 1410, 32--50] of cytochrome bd quinol oxidase sequences from different microorganisms have revealed a highly conserved sequence (GWXXXEXGRQPW; bold letters indicate strictly conserved residues) predicted to be on the periplasmic side of the membrane between transmembrane helices 8 and 9 in subunit I. The functional importance of this region is investigated in the current work by site-directed mutagenesis. Several mutations in this region (W441A, E445A/Q, R448A, Q449A, and W451A) resulted in a catalytically inactive enzyme with abnormal UV--vis spectra. E445A was selected for detailed analysis because of the absence of the absorption bands from heme b(595). Detailed spectroscopic and chemical analyses, indeed, show that one of the three heme prosthetic groups in the enzyme, heme b(595), is specifically perturbed and mostly missing from this mutant. Surprisingly, heme d, while known to interact with heme b(595), appears relatively unperturbed, whereas the low-spin heme b(558) shows some modification. This is the first report of a mutation that specifically affects the binding site of heme b(595).  相似文献   

18.
To counter antibiotic-resistant bacteria, we screened the Kitasato Institute for Life Sciences Chemical Library with bacterial quinol oxidase, which does not exist in the mitochondrial respiratory chain. We identified five prenylphenols, LL-Z1272β, γ, δ, ? and ζ, as new inhibitors for the Escherichia coli cytochrome bd. We found that these compounds also inhibited the E. coli bo-type ubiquinol oxidase and trypanosome alternative oxidase, although these three oxidases are structurally unrelated. LL-Z1272β and ? (dechlorinated derivatives) were more active against cytochrome bd while LL-Z1272γ, δ, and ζ (chlorinated derivatives) were potent inhibitors of cytochrome bo and trypanosome alternative oxidase. Thus prenylphenols are useful for the selective inhibition of quinol oxidases and for understanding the molecular mechanisms of respiratory quinol oxidases as a probe for the quinol oxidation site. Since quinol oxidases are absent from mammalian mitochondria, LL-Z1272β and δ, which are less toxic to human cells, could be used as lead compounds for development of novel chemotherapeutic agents against pathogenic bacteria and African trypanosomiasis.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract A CO-reactive hemoprotein was purified from the mitochondrial membrane fraction of Tetrahymena pyriformis . It showed absorption peaks at 615 and 455 nm in the reduced form and an α peak at 565 nm in the pyridine ferrohemochrome spectrum. Although the spectral properties were apparently similar to those of 'cytochrome a 620' which was previously proposed as a mitochondrial terminal oxidase in T. pyriformis , it did not contain any molecules of heme a or copper atoms. Further, it showed neither cytochrome c oxidase nor cytochrome c peroxidase activity. These results suggest that 'cytochrome a 620' may not be the terminal oxidase in the mitochondrial respiratory chain of T. pyriformis .  相似文献   

20.
The electron transport chain of the gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, grown aerobically, contained a number of primary dehydrogenases and respiratory components (soluble flavin, bound flavin, coenzyme Q9, heme b, heme c, and cytochrome o) in membrane particles of the organism. Cytochrome o, about 50% of the b-type cytochrome, seemed to function as a terminal oxidase in the respiratory chain. The electron transport chain of P. aeruginosa grown aerobically was suggested to be lined up in order of primary dehydrogenase, b, c1, c, o, and oxygen.  相似文献   

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