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1.
Polyclonal antibodies have been obtained against a synthetic dodecapeptide identical to the aminoacid sequence 120-131 DSPIKDGVWPPE (inferred from its DNA sequence) of Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase subunit III. The antibodies had a titer higher than 1:10000 when tested against the antigen. These antibodies have been used to produce immunological evidence that, despite the fact that subunit III is not isolated with cytochrome c oxidase, it exists in Paracoccus denitrificans lysates. The antibodies did not show reactivity with bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase either by ELISA or immunoblotting. It was also shown that the antibodies react with a single polypeptide present in Paracoccus denitrificans cell lysates, having an apparent molecular weight close to that of subunit III of bovine heart oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome oxidase is purified from rat liver and beef heart by affinity chromatography on a matrix of horse cytochrome c-Sepharose 4B. The success of this procedure, which employs a matrix previously found ineffective with beef or yeast oxidase, is attributed to thorough dispersion of the enzyme with nonionic detergent and a low density of cross-linking between the lysine residues of cytochrome c and the cyanogen bromide activated Sepharose. Beef heart oxidase is purified in one step from mitochondrial membranes solubilized with lauryl maltoside, yielding an enzyme of purity comparable to that obtained on a yeast cytochrome c matrix [Azzi, A., Bill, K., & Broger, C. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2447-2450]. Rat liver oxidase is prepared by hydroxyapatite and horse cytochrome c affinity chromatography in lauryl maltoside, yielding enzyme of high purity (12.5-13.5 nmol of heme a/mg of protein), high activity (TN = 270-400 s-1), and very low lipid content (1 mol of DPG and 1 mol of PI per mol of aa3). The activity of the enzyme is characterized by two kinetic phases, and electron transfer can be stimulated to maximal rates as high as 650 s-1 when supplemented with asolectin vesicles. The rat liver oxidase purified by this method does not contain the polypeptide designated as subunit III. Comparisons of the kinetic behavior of the enzyme in intact membranes, solubilized membranes, and the purified delipidated form reveal complex changes in kinetic parameters accompanying the changes in state and assay conditions, but do not support previous suggestions that subunit III is a critical factor in the binding of cytochrome c at the high-affinity site on oxidase or that cardiolipin is essential for the low-affinity interaction of cytochrome c. The purified rat liver oxidase retains the ability to exhibit respiratory control when reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles, providing definitive evidence that subunit III is not solely responsible for the ability of cytochrome oxidase to produce or respond to a membrane potential or proton gradient.  相似文献   

3.
Inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase function by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) reacted with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase in inhibit the proton-pumping function of this enzyme and to a lesser extent to inhibit electron transfer. The modification of cytochrome c oxidase in detergent dispersion or in vesicular membranes was in subunits II-IV. Labelling followed by fragmentation studies showed that there is one major site of modification in subunit III. DCCD was also incorporated into several sites in subunit II and at least one site of subunit IV. The major site in subunit III has a specificity for DCCD at least one order of magnitude greater than that of other sites (in subunits II and IV). Its modification could account for all of the observed effects of the reagent, at least for low concentrations of DCCD. Labelling of subunit II by DCCD was blocked by prior covalent attachment of arylazidocytochrome c, a cytochrome c derivative which binds to the high-affinity binding site for the substrate. The major site of DCCD binding in subunit III was sequenced. The label was found in glutamic acid 90 which is in a sequence of eight amino acids remarkably similar to the DCCD-binding site within the proteolipid protein of the mitochondrial ATP synthetase.  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome c oxidase from ox heart was depleted of subunit III and its transient kinetic properties studied by stopped-flow and flash photolysis. It was found that the overall mechanism of electron transfer is very similar for subunit-III-depleted and native oxidase, although significant differences in some kinetic parameters have been detected. These include the second-order rate constant for cytochrome c oxidation and the rate-limiting step of the overall process. Moreover, at low cytochrome c/oxidase ratios (where the number of reducing equivalents is insufficient), the rate of reoxidation of cytochrome a was found to be very slow, even in air, and in fact for the subunit-III-depleted enzyme is even slower than for the native oxidase. The stability of reduced cytochrome a excludes the likelihood that removal of subunit III leads to a new O2-binding site, and the result may be relevant to the lowered vectorial H+/e- stoichiometry. The subunit-III-depleted oxidase can be pulsed under appropriate conditions and its combination with CO is unchanged, as shown by kinetic experiments and difference spectroscopy.  相似文献   

5.
The isolated complexes of ferricytochrome c with cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 or complex III), and cytochrome c1 (a subunit of cytochrome c reductase) were investigated by the method of differential chemical modification (Bosshard, H.R. (1979) Methods Biochem. Anal. 25, 273-301). By this method the chemical reactivity of each of the 19 lysyl side chains of horse cytochrome c was compared in free and in complexed cytochrome c and binding sites were deduced from altered chemical reactivities of particular lysyl side chains in complexed cytochrome c. The most important findings follow. 1. The binding sites on cytochrome c for cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome c reductase, defined in terms of the involvement of particular lysyl residues, are indistinguishable. The two oxidation-reduction partners of cytochrome c interact at the front (exposed heme edge) and top left part of the molecule, shielding mainly lysyl residues 8, 13, 72 + 73, 86, and 87. The chemical reactivity of lysyl residues 22, 39, 53, 55, 60, 99, and 100 is unaffected by complex formation while the remaining lysyl residues in positions 5, 7, 25, 27, 79, and 88 are somewhat less reactive in the complexed molecule. 2. When bound to cytochrome c reductase or to the isolated cytochrome c1 subunit of the reductase the same lysyl side chains of cytochrome c are shielded. This indicates that cytochrome c binds to the c1 subunit of the reductase during the electron transfer process.  相似文献   

6.
Liposomes containing bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (COV) prepared by the cholate dialysis technique were purified from those devoid of the enzyme using discontinuous sucrose density ultra centrifugation to eliminate interference in proton-pumping assays. This technique was also used to purify liposomes containing cytochrome c oxidase depleted in subunit III (COV-III), a COX enzyme preparation with altered subunit structure, to assess if the technique could be applied to COX enzymes in which structural and functional changes have occurred. Upon discontinuous sucrose density ultra gradient ultracentrifugation, either COV or COV-III were separated into two bands. Liposomes devoid of enzyme sedimented into the 12% sucrose layer, whereas enzyme-containing liposomes (pCOV or pCOV-III) were found in the 13% sucrose layer. The yield of both pCOV or pCOV-III was greater than 60% (based on heme aa(3) content), suggesting a similar distribution of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and subunit III-depleted enzyme (COX-III) in the purified liposomes. The number of COX or COX-III molecules per phospholipid vesicle in purified fractions was estimated to be two. Removal of subunit III (M(r)=29,918) from COX resulted in a 30% decrease in electron transfer activity (either in COV-III or pCOV-III) when compared with COV and pCOV, respectively. Both pCOV and pCOV-III exhibited low endogenous proton permeability, as assessed by possessing high respiratory control ratios (14 and greater) and by having similar valinomycin concentration dependencies for stimulation of electron transfer activity in the presence of saturating amounts of CCCP. COV-III and pCOV-III exhibited a 39-44% decrease in proton-pumping activity when compared with COV and pCOV. These results showed that the separation of COX containing liposomes from those lacking enzyme by sucrose density gradient centrifugation can be used to characterize the biophysical properties of these liposomes.  相似文献   

7.
The existence of a proton pump associated with bovine cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) has over the last few years been a matter of considerable dispute. In an attempt to resolve some of the problems with the measuring system we have synthesized fluorescein-phosphatidylethanolamine which when reconstituted with cytochrome c oxidase into phospholipid vesicles provided a reliable indicator of the intravesicular pH. It was observed that cytochrome c oxidase catalyzed the abstraction of almost 2 protons from the intravesicular medium/molecule of ferrocytochrome c oxidized. In parallel experiments whereby the extravesicular pH was measured with an electrode it was found that the enzyme appeared to be responsible for the appearance of almost 1.0 proton/molecule of ferrocytochrome c oxidized. Taken together these data unequivocally demonstrate that cytochrome c oxidase behaves as a proton pump. Furthermore, the other proton which was abstracted is believed to be used for the process of the reduction of oxygen. Similar experiments were performed with a cytochrome c oxidase preparation which was devoid of subunit III. Under these circumstances the enzyme appeared to be unable to translocate protons across the vesicular membrane but was competent to abstract protons from the intravesicular medium for the reduction of oxygen.  相似文献   

8.
The ionic-strength-dependences of the rate constants (log k plotted versus square root of 1) for oxidation of native and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-modified cytochromes c by three different preparations of cytochrome c oxidase have complex non-linear character, which may be explained on the basis of present knowledge of the structure of the oxidase and the monomer-dimer equilibrium of the enzyme. The wave-type curve (with a minimum and a maximum) for oxidation of native cytochrome c by purified cytochrome c oxidase depleted of phospholipids may reflect consecutively inhibition of oxidase monomers (initial descending part), competition between this inhibition and dimer formation, resulting in increased activity (second part with positive slope), and finally inhibition of oxidase dimers (last descending part of the curve). The dependence of oxidation of native cytochrome c by cytochrome c oxidase reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles is a curve with a maximum, without the initial descending part described above. This may reflect the lack of pure monomers in the vesicles, where equilibrium is shifted to dimers even at low ionic strength. Subunit-III-depleted cytochrome c oxidase does not exhibit the maximum seen with the other two enzyme preparations. This may mean that removal of subunit III hinders dimer formation. The charge interactions of each of the cytochromes c (native or modified) with the three cytochrome c oxidase preparations are similar, as judged by the similar slopes of the linear dependences at I values above the optimal one. This shows that subunit III and the phospholipid membrane do not seem to be involved in the specific charge interaction of cytochrome c oxidase with cytochrome c.  相似文献   

9.
Ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (Complex III), cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase can be combined to reconstitute antimycin-sensitive ubiquinol oxidase activity. In 25 mM-acetate/Tris, pH 7.8, cytochrome c binds at high-affinity sites (KD = 0.1 microM) and low-affinity sites (KD approx. 10 microM). Quinol oxidase activity is 50% of maximal activity when cytochrome c is bound to only 25% of the high affinity sites. The other 50% of activity seems to be due to cytochrome c bound at low-affinity sites. Reconstitution in the presence of soya-bean phospholipids prevents aggregation of cytochrome c oxidase and gives rise to much higher rates of quinol oxidase. The cytochrome c dependence was unaltered. Antimycin curves have the same shape regardless of lipid/protein ratio, Complex III/cytochrome c oxidase ratio or cytochrome c concentration. Proposals on the nature of the interaction between Complex III, cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase are considered in the light of these results.  相似文献   

10.
Human cytochrome c oxidase was isolated in an active form from heart and from skeletal muscle by a fast, small-scale isolation method. The procedure involves differential solubilisation of the oxidase from mitochondrial fragments by laurylmaltoside and KCl, followed by size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate showed differences between the subunit VI region of cytochrome c oxidases from human heart and skeletal muscle, suggesting different isoenzyme forms in the two organs. This finding might be of importance in explaining mitochondrial myopathy which shows a deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase in skeletal muscle only. In SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis most human cytochrome c oxidase subunits migrated differently from their bovine counterparts. However, the position of subunits III and IV was the same in the human and in the bovine enzymes. The much higher mobility of human cytochrome c oxidase subunit II is explained by a greater hydrophobicity of this polypeptide than of that of the subunit II of the bovine enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were undertaken to assess the postulated involvement of subunit III in the proton-linked functions of cytochrome c oxidase. The effect of pH on the steady-state kinetic [corrected] parameters of subunit III containing and subunit III depleted cytochrome oxidase was determined by using beef heart and rat liver enzymes reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles. The TNmax and Km values for the III-containing enzyme increase with decreasing pH in a manner quantitatively similar to that reported by Thornstrom et al. [(1984) Chem. Scr. 24, 230-235], giving three apparent pKa values of less than 5.0, 6.2, and 7.8. The maximal activities of the subunit III depleted enzymes (beef heart and rat liver) show a similar dependence on pH, but the Km values are consistently higher than those of the III-containing enzyme, an effect that is accentuated at low pH. The pH dependence of TNmax/Km for both forms of the enzyme (+/- subunit III) indicates that protonation of a group with an apparent pKa of 5.7 lowers the affinity for substrate (cytochrome c) independently of a continued increase in maximal velocity. N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) decreases the pH responsiveness of the electron-transfer activity to the same extent in both III-containing and III-depleted enzymes, indicating that this effect is mediated by a peptide other than subunit III. Control of intramolecular electron transfer by a transmembrane pH gradient (or alkaline intravesicular pH) is shown to occur in cytochrome oxidase vesicles with cytochrome c as the electron donor, in agreement with results of Moroney et al. [(1984) Biochemistry 23, 4991-4997] using hexaammineruthenium(II) as the reductant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
In order to obtain information on the role of subunit III in the function and aggregation state of cytochrome c oxidase, the kinetics of ferrocytochrome c oxidation by the bovine cytochrome c oxidase depleted of its subunit III were studied and compared with those of the oxidase isolated from P. denitrificans which contains only two subunits. The aggregation state of both enzymes dispersed in dodecyl maltoside was also compared. The two-subunit oxidase from P. denitrificans gave linear Eadie-Hofstee plots and the enzyme resulted to be monomeric (Mr = 82 000) both, in gel filtration and sucrose gradient centrifugation studies. The bovine heart subunit III depleted enzyme, under conditions when the P. denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase was in the form of monomers, was found to be dimeric by sucrose gradient centrifugation analysis. At lower enzyme concentrations monomers were, however, detected by gel filtration. Depletion of subunit III was accompanied by the loss of small polypeptides (VIa, VIb and VIIa) and of almost all phospholipid (1-2 molecules were left per molecule of enzyme). The electron-transfer activity of the subunit III-depleted enzyme showed a monophasic Eadie-Hofstee plot, which upon addition of phospholipids became non-linear, similar to that of the control bovine cytochrome c oxidase. One of the roles of subunit III may be that of stabilising the dimers of cytochrome c oxidase. Lack of this subunit and loss of phospholipid is accompanied by a change in the kinetics of electron transfer, which might be the consequence of enzyme monomerisation.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the covalent binding of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) to cytochrome c oxidase in relation to its inhibition of ferrocytochrome c-induced H+ translocation by the enzyme reconstituted in lipid vesicles. DCCD bound to the reconstituted oxidase in a time- and concentration-dependent manner which appeared to correlate with its inhibition of H+ translocation. In both reconstituted vesicles and intact beef heart mitochondria, the DCCD-binding site was located in subunit III of the oxidase. The apolar nature of DCCD and relatively minor effects of the hydrophilic carbodiimide, 1-ethyl-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide, on H+ translocation by the oxidase indicate that the site of action of DCCD is hydrophobic. DCCD also bound to isolated cytochrome c oxidase, though in this case subunits III and IV were labeled. The maximal overall stoichiometries of DCCD molecules bound per cytochrome c oxidase molecule were 1 and 1.6 for the reconstituted and isolated enzymes, respectively. These findings point to subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase having an important role in H+ translocation by the enzyme and indicate that DCCD may prove a useful tool in elucidating the mechanism of H+ pumping.  相似文献   

14.
The stability of monomeric and dimeric bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase in laurylmaltoside-containing buffers of high ionic strength allowed separation of the two forms by gel-filtration high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). A solution of the dimeric oxidase could be diluted without monomerisation. Both monomeric and dimeric cytochrome c oxidase showed biphasic steady-state kinetics when assayed spectrophotometrically at low ionic strength. Thus, the biphasic kinetics did not result from negative cooperativity between the two adjacent cytochrome c binding sites of the monomers constituting the dimeric oxidase. On polyacrylamide gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) a fraction of subunit III of the dimeric enzyme migrated as a dimer, a phenomenon not seen with the monomeric enzyme. This might suggest that in the dimeric oxidase subunit III lies on the contact surface between the protomers. If so, the presumably hydrophobic interaction between the two subunits III resisted dissociation by SDS to some extent. Addition of sufficient ascorbate and cytochrome c to the monomeric oxidase to allow a few turnovers induced slow dimerisation (on a time-scale of hours). This probably indicates that one of the transient forms arising upon reoxidation of the reduced enzyme is more easily converted to the dimeric state than the resting enzyme. Gel-filtration HPLC proved to be a useful step in small-scale purification of cytochrome c oxidase. In the presence of laurylmaltoside the monomeric oxidase eluted after the usual trace contaminants, the dimeric Complex III and the much larger Complex I. The procedure is fast and non-denaturing, although limited by the capacity of available columns.  相似文献   

15.
Formamide is a slow-onset inhibitor of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase that is proposed to act by blocking water movement through the protein. In the presence of formamide the redox level of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase evolves over the steady state as the apparent electron transfer rate from cytochrome a to cytochrome a(3) slows. At maximal inhibition cytochrome a and cytochrome c are fully reduced, whereas cytochrome a(3) and Cu(B) remain fully oxidized consistent with the idea that formamide interferes with electron transfer between cytochrome a and the oxygen reaction site. However, transient kinetic studies show that intrinsic rates of electron transfer are unchanged in the formamide-inhibited enzyme. Formamide inhibition is demonstrated for another member of the heme-oxidase family, cytochrome c oxidase from Bacillus subtilis, but the onset of inhibition is much quicker than for mitochondrial oxidase. If formamide inhibition arises from a steric blockade of water exchange during catalysis then water exchange in the smaller bacterial oxidase is more open. Subunit III removal from the mitochondrial oxidase hastens the onset of formamide inhibition suggesting a role for subunit III in controlling water exchange during the cytochrome c oxidase reaction.  相似文献   

16.
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase was labeled at a single sulfhydryl group by treatment with 5 mM N-iodoacetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (1,5-I-AEDANS) at pH 8.0 for 4 h. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis revealed that the enzyme was exclusively labeled at subunit III, presumably at Cys-115. The high affinity phase of the electron transfer reaction with horse cytochrome c was not affected by acetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (AEDANS) labeling. Addition of horse cytochrome c to dimeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase resulted in a 55% decrease in the AEDANS fluorescence due to the formation of a 1:1 complex between the two proteins. Forster energy transfer calculations indicated that the distance from the AEDANS label on subunit III to the heme group of cytochrome c was in the range 26-40 A. In contrast to the results with the dimeric enzyme, the fluorescence of monomeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase was not quenched at all by binding horse heart cytochrome c, indicating that the AEDANS label on subunit III was at least 54 A from the heme group of cytochrome c. These results support a model in which the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of cytochrome c interact with carboxylates on subunit II of one monomer of the cytochrome c oxidase dimer and the back of the molecule is close to subunit III on the other monomer. In order to identify the cysteine residues that ligand copper A, a new procedure was developed to specifically remove copper A from cytochrome c oxidase by incubation with 2-mercaptoethanol followed by gel chromatography. Treatment of the copper A-depleted cytochrome c oxidase preparation with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling sulfhydryl groups on subunit II as well as on subunit III. No additional subunits were labeled. This result indicates that the copper A binding site is located at cysteines 196 and/or 200 of subunit II and that removal of copper A exposes these residues for labeling by 1,5-I-AEDANS. Alternative copper A depletion methods involving incubation with bathocuproine sulfonate (Weintraub, S.T., and Wharton, D.C. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1669-1676) or p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate (Li, P.M., Gelles, J., Chan, S.I., Sullivan, R.J., and Scott, R.A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2091-2095) were also investigated. Treatment of these preparations with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling cysteine residues on subunits II and III. However, additional sulfhydryl residues on other subunits were also labeled, preventing a definitive assignment of the location of copper A using these depletion procedures.  相似文献   

17.
The electron-transfer and proton-translocation activities of cytochrome c oxidase deficient in subunit III (Mr 29 884) prepared by native gel electrophoresis [Ludwig, B., Downer, N. W., & Capaldi, R. A. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 1401-1407] have been investigated. This preparation has been depleted of 82-87% of its subunit III content as quantitated by Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining intensity on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and [14C]dicyclohexylcarbodiimide labeling. The maximum rate of electron transfer of the subunit III deficient enzyme at pH 6.5 is 383 s-1, 78% of control enzyme. Neither the high-affinity site (Km = 10(-8) M) nor the low-affinity site (Km = 10(-6) M) of the cytochrome c kinetic interaction with cytochrome c oxidase is affected by the removal of subunit III. Subunit III deficient cytochrome c oxidase retains the ability to bind cytochrome c in both the high- and low-affinity sites as determined in direct thermodynamic binding experiments. Liposomes containing this preparation exhibit a respiratory control ratio [Hinkle, P. C., Kim, J. J., & Racker, E. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247, 1338-1341] of 3.9, while liposomes containing control enzyme exhibit a ratio of 4.3, suggesting that they have a similar proton permeability. Vectorial proton translocation initiated by the addition of ferrocytochrome c in liposomes containing subunit III deficient enzyme is decreased by 64% compared to those containing control enzyme. When the proton-translocated to electron-transferred ratio is measured in these phospholipid vesicles at constant enzyme turnover, removal of subunit III from the enzyme decreases the ratio from 0.52 to 0.21, a 60% decrease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
1. A cDNA probe encoding cytochrome c oxidase subunit III cloned from rat liver mitochondria was used to quantify mRNA levels in rat, mouse and rabbit tissues. This was compared to its phenotypic expression, using enzyme activity. 2. Enzyme activities were highest in mouse, intermediate in rat, and lowest in rabbit tissues. 3. Subunit III mRNA levels were easily quantified in rat, but could not be accurately measured in rabbit or mouse tissues despite high cytochrome c oxidase activities. 4. Significant subunit III sequence divergence must exist, among these species. Caution should be exercised in quantifying the expression of this mitochondrial gene.  相似文献   

19.
The arrangement of the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits in the inner membrane of bovine heart mitochondria was investigated. The experiments were carried out in three steps. In the first step, exposed subunits were coupled to the membrane-impermeant reagent p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate. In the second step, the membranes were lysed with cholate anc cytochrome c oxidase was isolated by immunoprecipitation. In the third step, the six cytochrome c oxidase subunits were separated from each other by dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis and scanned for radioactivity. Exposed subunits on the outer side of the mitochondrial inner membrane were identified by labeling intact mitochondria. Exposed subunits on the matrix side of the inner membrane were identified by labeling sonically prepared submitochondrial particles in which the matrix side of the inner membrane is exposed to the suspending medium. Since sonic irradiation leads to a rearrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in a large fraction of the resulting submitochondrial particles, an immunochemical procedure was developed for isolating particles with a low content of displaced cytochrome c oxidase. With mitochondria, subunits II, V, and VI were labeled, whereas in purified submitochondrial particles most of the label was in subunit III. The arrangement of cytochrome c oxidase in the mitochondrial inner membrane is thus transmembraneous and asymmetric; subunits II, V, and VI are situated on the outer side, subunit III is situated on the matrix side, and subunits I and IV are buried in the interior of the membrane. In a study of purified cytochrome c oxidase labeled with p-diazonium benzene [32S]sulfonate, the results were similar to those obtained with the membrane-bound enzyme. Subunits I and IV were inaccessible to the reagent, whereas the other four subunits were accessible. In contrast, all six subunits became labeled if the enzyme was dissociated with dodecyl sulfate before being exposed to the labeling reagent.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of protein phosphorylation on the kinetics of cytochrome c oxidase was investigated by applying Western blotting, mass spectrometry, and kinetic measurements with an oxygen electrode. The isolated enzyme from bovine heart exhibited serine, threonine, and/or tyrosine phosphorylation in various subunits, except subunit I, by using phosphoamino acid-specific antibodies. The kinetics revealed slight inhibition of oxygen uptake in the presence of ATP, as compared with the presence of ADP. Mass spectrometry identified the phosphorylation of Ser-34 at subunit IV and Ser-4 and Thr-35 at subunit Va. Incubation of the isolated enzyme with protein kinase A, cAMP, and ATP resulted in serine and threonine phosphorylation of subunit I, which was correlated with sigmoidal inhibition kinetics in the presence of ATP. This allosteric ATP-inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase was also found in rat heart mitochondria, which had been rapidly prepared in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors. The isolated rat heart enzyme, prepared from the mitochondria by blue native gel electrophoresis, showed serine, threonine, and tyrosine phosphorylation of subunit I. It is concluded that the allosteric ATP-inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase, previously suggested to keep the mitochondrial membrane potential and thus the reactive oxygen species production in cells at low levels, occurs in living cells and is based on phosphorylation of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I.  相似文献   

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