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1.
Summary A model of electron transport through bileaflet membranes comprised of chlorophylls and carotenoids is proposed and can account for the photoresponses observed in chloroplast-extract membranes. Some features of the model are as follows: In the absence of any specific additive, such as phycocyanin, the energy barrier for electron transfer between chromophores in the membrane and a redox pair in the aqueous solution is significantly high, so that the only realistic mechanism for electron exchange through the interface is by quantum-mechanical tunneling. In an analogy to theories developed for the explanation of semiconductor electrode behavior, the essential requirement of energy overlap between occupied and unoccupied electronic states on either side of the membrane-water interface is explored. The extent of overlap can be controlled by the potential difference developed across the interface. The presence of the carotenoids can reduce the energy barrier for electron movement within she membrane so that excited electrons can pass from the chlorophyll chromophores on one tide of the membrane interface to those on the other side. It is suggested that electron tunneling is the mechanism by which reducing substances belonging to a redox pair of high oxidation-reduction potential deliver their electrons to vacant orbitals in the photosynthetic membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Adrenal medullary chromaffin-vesicle membranes contain a transmembrane electron carrier that may provide reducing equivalents for intravesicular dopamine beta-hydroxylase in vivo. This electron transfer system can generate a membrane potential (inside positive) across resealed chromaffin-vesicle membranes (ghosts) by passing electrons from an internal electron donor to an external electron acceptor. Both ascorbic acid and isoascorbic acid are suitable electron donors. As an electron acceptor, ferricyanide elicits a transient increase in membrane potential at physiological temperatures. A stable membrane potential can be produced by coupling the chromaffin-vesicle electron-transfer system to cytochrome oxidase by using cytochrome c. The membrane potential is generated by transferring electrons from the internal electron donor to cytochrome c. Cytochrome c is then reoxidized by cytochrome oxidase. In this coupled system, the rate of electron transfer can be measured as the rate of oxygen consumption. The chromaffin-vesicle electron-transfer system reduces cytochrome c relatively slowly, but the rate is greatly accelerated by low concentrations of ferrocyanide. Accordingly, stable electron transfer dependent membrane potentials require cytochrome c, oxygen, and ferrocyanide. They are abolished by the cytochrome oxidase inhibitor cyanide. This membrane potential drives reserpine-sensitive norepinephrine transport, confirming the location of the electron-transfer system in the chromaffin-vesicle membrane. This also demonstrates the potential usefulness of the electron transfer driven membrane potential for studying energy-linked processes in this membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Respiratory complex I couples the transfer of electrons from NADH to ubiquinone and the translocation of protons across the mitochondrial membrane. A detailed understanding of the midpoint reduction potentials (Em) of each redox center and the factors which influence those potentials are critical in the elucidation of the mechanism of electron transfer in this enzyme. We present accurate electrostatic interaction energies for the iron-sulfur (FeS) clusters of complex I to facilitate the development of models and the interpretation of experiments in connection to electron transfer (ET) in this enzyme. To calculate redox titration curves for the FeS clusters it is necessary to include interactions between clusters, which in turn can be used to refine Em values and validate spectroscopic assignments of each cluster. Calculated titration curves for clusters N4, N5, and N6a are discussed. Furthermore, we present some initial findings on the electrostatics of the redox centers of complex I under the influence of externally applied membrane potentials. A means of determining the location of the FeS cofactors within the holo-complex based on electrostatic arguments is proposed. A simple electrostatic model of the protein/membrane system is examined to illustrate the viability of our hypothesis.  相似文献   

4.
Human novel reductase 1 (NR1) is an NADPH dependent diflavin oxidoreductase related to cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). The FAD/NADPH- and FMN-binding domains of NR1 have been expressed and purified and their redox properties studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods, and by potentiometry. The midpoint reduction potentials of the oxidized/semiquinone (-315 +/- 5 mV) and semiquinone/dihydroquinone (-365 +/- 15 mV) couples of the FAD/NADPH domain are similar to those for the FAD/NADPH domain of human CPR, but the rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 is approximately 200-fold slower. Hydride transfer is rate-limiting in steady-state reactions of the FAD/NADPH domain with artificial redox acceptors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that hydride transfer from the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 to NADP+ is faster than hydride transfer in the physiological direction (NADPH to FAD), consistent with the measured reduction potentials of the FAD couples [midpoint potential for FAD redox couples is -340 mV, cf-320 mV for NAD(P)H]. The midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin couples in the FMN domain are -146 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) and -305 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/dihydroquinone). The FMN oxidized/semiquinone couple indicates stabilization of the FMN semiquinone, consistent with (a) a need to transfer electrons from the FAD/NADPH domain to the FMN domain, and (b) the thermodynamic properties of the FMN domain in CPR and nitric oxide synthase. Despite overall structural resemblance of NR1 and CPR, our studies reveal thermodynamic similarities but major kinetic differences in the electron transfer reactions catalysed by the flavin-binding domains.  相似文献   

5.
To model the effect of membrane environment on the electron transfer reactions we studied the thermodynamics and kinetics of the reactions of cytochrome c and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol with ferri- and ferrocyanide in the reversed micelles cetyltrimethylammonium bromide in chloroform/octan mixture. Incorporation of the protein in micelles leads to increasing the equilibrium constant (K1) up to 300 times. This effect is mainly due to a decrease in the ferrocytochrome c oxidation rate constant in the reaction with ferricyanide. Micellar solubilization of the dye also leads to a marked increase in the equilibrium constant K2. The estimations of the values K1 and K2 in water-alcohol mixtures and in aqueous micellar solutions of surfactant together with kinetical and spectral data show that the increase of K1 and K2 in reversed micelles is caused generally by redox potential changes of low-molecular reagents. The latter change their environment after adsorption on the micellar surface.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Artificial bileaflet membranes were formed from extracts of chloroplasts. Gradients of a redox potential were created across the membranes by adding various concentrations of ceric-cerous ions, ferric-ferrous ions, and ascorbic acid to the aqueous solutions on either side of the membrane. When a membrane interposed between solutions of different redox potential was irradiated with light, a potential difference of up to 50 mV was recorded. Analysis of the photoresponse allowed its separation into two components: a photoelectromotive driving force dependent upon the redox potential gradient, and a photoconductive pathway dependent upon the amount of light absorbed by the membranes. There appeared to be a limit to the photocurrent that could be drawn from a membrane at a particular intensity of irradiation; i.e., it did not increase indefinitely with increase of the redox potential gradient. Conductance of the photoconductive pathway was independent of temperature. Phycocyanin added to the aqueous solution participated in the photoresponse in a unidirectional manner that suggested facilitation of electron transport from membrane to acceptors in the aqueous solution.  相似文献   

7.
Phytoplankton plasma membrane electron transport activity was determined by monitoring the reduction of the impermeant artificial electron acceptor ferricyanide in a range of diatoms. The results revealed that constitutive plasma membrane electron transport activity of marine diatoms is high compared with chlorophytes and higher plant cells. Diatom plasma membrane electron transport activity was not significantly increased by iron limitation. This lack of induction on iron limitation indicates that diatoms have an iron acquisition strategy that is distinct from chlorophytes and the dicotyledon higher plants that exhibit marked increases in plasma membrane ferricyanide reductase activity on iron limitation. The interaction of the constitutive plasma membrane electron transport with photosynthesis was also investigated. We found that 1) ferricyanide reduction at the plasma membrane was progressively inhibited in response to increasing irradiances; 2) the presence of extracellular ferricyanide, but not the reduced couple ferrocyanide, caused a marked inhibition of carbon fixation at high irradiance; and 3) extracellular electron acceptors ferricyanide and hexachloroiridate (but not ferrocyanide) induced an immediate and reversible decrease in fluorescence yields (Fo and Fm). The extent to which extracellular electron acceptors affected CO2 fixation, Fo, and Fm was related to the level of constitutive ferricyanide reductase activity, the species with highest ferricyanide reduction rates being most sensitive. The data suggest that consumption of electrons and/or reductant at the plasma membrane by external acceptors may compete directly with CO2 fixation for electrons, alter cytosolic‐chloroplast redox poise, and/or induce a redox‐signaling cascade that alters photosynthetic metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence for coenzyme Q function in transplasma membrane electron transport   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Transplasma membrane electron transport activity has been associated with stimulation of cell growth. Coenzyme Q is present in plasma membranes and because of its lipid solubility would be a logical carrier to transport electrons across the plasma membrane. Extraction of coenzyme Q from isolated rat liver plasma membranes decreases the NADH ferricyanide reductase and added coenzyme Q10 restores the activity. Piericidin and other analogs of coenzyme Q inhibit transplasma membrane electron transport as measured by ferricyanide reduction by intact cells and NADH ferricyanide reduction by isolated plasma membranes. The inhibition by the analogs is reversed by added coenzyme Q10. Thus, coenzyme Q in plasma membrane may act as a transmembrane electron carrier for the redox system which has been shown to control cell growth.  相似文献   

9.
The possible role of redox-associated protons in growth of plant cells   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The protons excreted by plant cells may arise by two different mechanisms: (1) by the action of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and (2) by plasma membrane redox reactions. The exact proportion from each source is not known, but the plasma membrane H+-ATPase is, by far, the major contributor to proton efflux. There is still some question of whether the redox-associated protons produced by NADH oxidation on the inner side of the plasma membrane traverse the membrane in a 1 : 1 relationship with electrons generated in the redox reactions. Membrane depolarization observed in the presence of ferricyanide reduction by plasma membranes of whole cells or tissues or the lag period between ferricyanide reduction and medium acidification argue that only scalar protons may be involved. The other major argument against tight coupling between protons and electrons involves the concept of strong charge compensation. When ferricyanide is reduced to ferrocyanide on the outside of cells or tissues, an extra negative charge arises, which is compensated for by the release of H+ or K+, so that the total ratio of increased H+ plus K+ equals the electrons transferred by transmembrane electron transport. These are strong arguments against a tight coupling between electrons and protons excreted by the plasma membrane. On the other hand, there is no question that inhibitor studies provide evidence for two mechanisms of proton generation by plasma membranes. When the H+-ATPase activity is totally inhibited, the addition of ferricyanide induces a burst of extra proton excretion, orvice versa, when plasma membrane redox reactions are inhibited, the H+-ATPase can function normally. Since plasma membrane redox reactions and associated H+ excretion are related to growth, it is possible that in plants the ATPase-generated protons have a different function from redox-associated protons. The H+-ATPase-generated protons have been considered for many years to be necessary for cell wall expansion, allowing elongation to take place. A special function of the redox-generated protons may be in initiating proliferative cell growth, based on the presence of a hormone-stimulated NADH oxidase in membranes of soybean hypocotyls and stimulation of root growth by low concentrations of oxidants. Here we propose that this NADH oxidase and the redox protons released by its action control growth. The mechanism for this may be the evolution of protons into a special membrane domain, from which a signal to initiate cell proliferation may originate, independent of the action of the H+-ATPase-generated protons. It is also possible that both expansion and proliferative growth are controlled by redox-generated protons.  相似文献   

10.
Redox compartmentalization in eukaryotic cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Diverse functions of eukaryotic cells are optimized by organization of compatible chemistries into distinct compartments defined by the structures of lipid-containing membranes, multiprotein complexes and oligomeric structures of saccharides and nucleic acids. This structural and chemical organization is coordinated, in part, through cysteine residues of proteins which undergo reversible oxidation-reduction and serve as chemical/structural transducing elements. The central thiol/disulfide redox couples, thioredoxin-1, thioredoxin-2, GSH/GSSG and cysteine/cystine (Cys/CySS), are not in equilibrium with each other and are maintained at distinct, non-equilibrium potentials in mitochondria, nuclei, the secretory pathway and the extracellular space. Mitochondria contain the most reducing compartment, have the highest rates of electron transfer and are highly sensitive to oxidation. Nuclei also have more reduced redox potentials but are relatively resistant to oxidation. The secretory pathway contains oxidative systems which introduce disulfides into proteins for export. The cytoplasm contains few metabolic oxidases and this maintains an environment for redox signaling dependent upon NADPH oxidases and NO synthases. Extracellular compartments are maintained at stable oxidizing potentials. Controlled changes in cytoplasmic GSH/GSSG redox potential are associated with functional state, varying with proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Variation in extracellular Cys/CySS redox potential is also associated with proliferation, cell adhesion and apoptosis. Thus, cellular redox biology is inseparable from redox compartmentalization. Further elucidation of the redox control networks within compartments will improve the mechanistic understanding of cell functions and their disruption in disease.  相似文献   

11.
Respiration is fundamental to the aerobic and anaerobic energy metabolism of many prokaryotic and most eukaryotic organisms. In principle, the free energy of a redox reaction catalysed by a membrane-bound electron transport chain is transduced via the generation of an electrochemical ion (usually proton) gradient across a coupling membrane that drives ATP synthesis. The proton motive force (pmf) can be built up by different mechanisms like proton pumping, quinone/quinol cycling or by a redox loop. The latter couples electron transport to a net proton transfer across the membrane without proton pumping. Instead, charge separation is achieved by quinone-reactive enzymes or enzyme complexes whose active sites for substrates and quinones are situated on different sides of the coupling membrane. The necessary transmembrane electron transport is usually accomplished by the presence of two haem groups that face opposite sides of the membrane. There are many different enzyme complexes that are part of redox loops and their catalysed redox reactions can be either electrogenic, electroneutral (non-proton motive) or even pmf-consuming. This article gives conceptual classification of different operational organisations of redox loops and uses this as a platform from which to explore the biodiversity of quinone/quinol-cycling redox systems.  相似文献   

12.
Light induces the generation of an electrochemical potential difference across the functional membrane of photosynthesis of green plants. Experimental results on the electrochemical phenomena have been largely interpreted in terms of a vectorial alternating electron hydrogen transport system as originally hypothesized by Mitchell.We asked whether or not the reaction coordinate of the electron transport crosses the membrane, and whether or not the protolytic reactions at either side of the membrane can be understood from the protolytic properties of the redox components involved. For this we studied the flash-light-induced protolytic reactions in the outer and the inner aqueous phase of the chloroplast inner disk membranes. Four sites of protolytic reactions were identified, two at either side of the membrane. One of these sites had to be attributed to the reduction of the terminal electron acceptor at the outer side of the membrane. Evidence is presented for the coupling of the other sites to the oxidation of water at the inner side of the membrane, to the reduction of plastoquinone at the outer side and its oxidation at the inner side, respectively. These results support Mitchell's hypothesis for the generation of an electrochemical potential difference by a vectorial electron transport system.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of ion transport in the epithelium of rabbit cornea was studied by determining the intracellular ion activity of Cl-, Na+ and K+ under various conditions. Ionic activities were measured by means of microelectrodes containing liquid ion-exchangers selective for Cl-, Na+ or K+. The Cl- activity in basal cells of the epithelium in Na+ containing bathing solutions amounts to 28 +/- 2 mM (n = 11). This value is 1.9-times greater than expected on the basis of passive distribution across the tear side membrane. This finding suggests the existence of a Cl- accumulating process. Replacement of Na+ in the aqueous bathing solution by choline or tetraethylammonium results in a reversible decrease in Cl- activity to 22 +/- 1 mM (n = 11, P less than 0.025). The ratio of observed and predicted Cl- activity decreased significantly from 1.9 to 1.4 (P less than 0.05). The decrease in Cl- activity due to Na+ replacement was rather slow. In contrast, after readmittance of Na+ to the aqueous bathing solution, Cl- activity rose to a stable level within 30 min. These results indicate involvement of Na+ in Cl- accumulation into the basal cells of the epithelium. The K+ and Na+ activities of the basal cells of rabbit corneal epithelium in control bathing solutions were 75 +/- 4 mM (n = 13) and 24 +/- 3 mM (n = 12), respectively. The results can be summarized in the following model for Cl- transport across corneal epithelium. Cl- is accumulated in the basal cells across the aqueous side membrane, energized by a favourable Na+ gradient. Cl- will subsequently leak out across the tear side membranes. Na+ is extruded again across the aqueous side membrane of the epithelium by the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

14.
Njus D  Wigle M  Kelley PM  Kipp BH  Schlegel HB 《Biochemistry》2001,40(39):11905-11911
The 1 equiv reaction between ascorbic acid and cytochrome b(561) is a good model for redox reactions between metalloproteins (electron carriers) and specific organic substrates (hydrogen-atom carriers). Diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibits the reaction of cytochrome b(561) with ascorbate by modifying a histidine residue in the ascorbate-binding site. Ferri/ferrocyanide can mediate reduction of DEPC-treated cytochrome b(561) by ascorbic acid, indicating that DEPC-inhibited cytochrome b(561) cannot accept electrons from a hydrogen-atom donor like ascorbate but can still accept electrons from an electron donor like ferrocyanide. Ascorbic acid reduces cytochrome b(561) with a K(m) of 1.0 +/- 0.2 mM and a V(max) of 4.1 +/- 0.8 s(-1) at pH 7.0. V(max)/K(m) decreases at low pH but is approximately constant at pH >7. The rate constant for oxidation of cytochrome b(561) by semidehydroascorbate decreases at high pH but is approximately constant at pH <7. This suggests that the active site must be unprotonated to react with ascorbate and protonated to react with semidehydroascorbate. Molecular modeling calculations show that hydrogen bonding between the 2-hydroxyl of ascorbate and imidazole stabilizes the ascorbate radical relative to the monoanion. These results are consistent with the following mechanism for ascorbate oxidation. (1) The ascorbate monoanion binds to an unprotonated site (histidine) on cytochrome b(561). (2) This complex donates an electron to reduce the heme. (3) The semidehydroascorbate anion dissociates from the cytochrome, leaving a proton associated with the binding site. (4) The binding site is deprotonated to complete the cycle. In this mechanism, an essential role of the cytochrome is to bind the ascorbate monoanion, which does not react by outer-sphere electron transfer in solution, and complex it in such a way that the complex acts as an electron donor. Thermodynamic considerations show that no steps in this process involve large changes in free energy, so the mechanism is reversible and capable of fulfilling the cytochrome's function of equilibrating ascorbate and semidehydroascorbate.  相似文献   

15.
According to the concept of the Q-cycle, the H+/e- ratio of the electron transport chain of thylakoids can be raised from 2 to 3 by means of the rereduction of plastoquinone across the cytochrome b6f complex. In order to investigate the H+/e- ratio we compared stationary rates of electron transport and proton translocation in spinach thylakoids both in the presence of the artificial electron acceptor ferricyanide and in the presence of the natural acceptor system ferredoxin+NADP. The results may be summarised as follows: (1) a variability of the H+/e- ratio occurs with either acceptor. H+/e- ratios of 3 (or even higher in the case of the natural acceptor system, see below) are decreased towards 2 if strong light intensity and low membrane permeability are employed. Mechanistically this could be explained by proton channels connecting the plastoquinol binding site alternatively to the lumenal or stromal side of the cytochrome b6f complex, giving rise to a proton slip reaction at high transmembrane DeltapH. In this slip reaction protons are deposited on the stromal instead of the lumenal side. In addition to the pH effect there seems to be a contribution of the redox state of the plastoquinone pool to the control of proton translocation; switching over to stromal proton deposition is favoured when the reduced state of plastoquinone becomes dominant. (2) In the presence of NADP a competition of both NADP and oxygen for the electrons supplied by photosystem I takes place, inducing a general increase of the H+/e- ratios above the values obtained with ferricyanide. The implications with respect to the adjustment of a proper ATP/NADPH ratio for CO2 reduction are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Experimental systems demonstrate that humic acids are capable of accepting electrons from a wide spectrum of donors and transferring those electrons to a wide spectrum of acceptors, linking normally thermodynamically discrete redox couples. By functioning as a wide redox potential flavoprotein, humics encompass all the redox potentials pertinent to aquatic systems and hence determine relative electron activity, the negative log of which is pE. A chemically determined, system oxidation-reduction potential allows pE to be used along with pH in developing a biochemical framework for thermodynamically derived predictions of aquatic system behavior.Dept. of zoologyUniversity of Toronto  相似文献   

17.
The three mammalian nitric-oxide synthases produce NO from arginine in a reaction requiring 3 electrons per NO, which are supplied to the catalytic center from NADPH through reductase domains incorporating FAD and FMN cofactors. The isoforms share a common reaction mechanism and requirements for reducing equivalents but differ in regulation; the endothelial and neuronal isoforms are controlled by calcium/calmodulin modulation of the electron transfer system, while the inducible isoform binds calmodulin at all physiological Ca(2+) concentrations and is always on. The thermodynamics of electron transfer through the flavin domains in all three isoforms are basically similar. The major flavin states are FMN, FMNH., FMNH(2), FAD, FADH., and FADH(2). The FMN/FMNH. couple is high potential ( approximately 100 mV) in all three isoforms and is unlikely to be catalytically competent; the other three flavin couples form a nearly isopotential group clustered around -250 mV. Reduction of the flavins by the pyridine nucleotide couple at -325 mV is thus moderately thermodynamically favorable. The ferri/ferroheme couple in all three isoforms is approximately -270 mV in the presence of saturating arginine. Ca(2+)/calmodulin has no effect on the potentials of any of the couples in endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) or neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS). The pH dependence of the flavin couples suggests the presence of ionizable groups coupled to the flavin redox/protonation states.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c3 (cyt c3) can mediate electron transport across phosphatidylcholine (PC)/cardiolipin (CL) and PC/phosphatidylglycerol (PG) membranes. A two-molecule process is involved in the electron transport across PC/CL membranes in the liquid-crystalline state. In contrast, a single-molecule process dominates the electron transport across PC/CL membranes in the gel state and PC/PG membranes in the liquid-crystalline and gel states. Namely, the electron transport mechanism differs with the phospholipid composition and membrane fluidity. The rate-limiting step of the two-molecule process was lateral diffusion of cyt c3 in membranes. The rate constants for the three single-molecule process cases were similar to each other. To elucidate these reaction processes, interactions between cyt c3 and phosphate groups and between cyt c3 and the glycerol backbones of phospholipid bilayers were investigated by means of 31P and 2H solid-state NMR, respectively, for CL and PC/CL membranes. The results showed that the polar headgroups of both phosphatidylcholine and CL are involved in the binding of cyt c3. Also, cyt c3 penetrates into membranes, which would induce distortion of the lipid bilayer. The molecular mechanisms underlying the single- and two-molecule processes are discussed in terms of membrane structure.  相似文献   

19.
Transmembrane electrical currents of spin-labeled hydrophobic ions.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
When spin-labeled phosphonium ions are rapidly mixed with phospholipid vesicles, time-dependent changes in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of the spin label are observed. These changes are interpreted in terms of transmembrane transport of the hydrophobic ion, and simple analysis of the data at different membrane potentials is shown to give the binding constant of the ion to both membrane surfaces, the permeability, and current-voltage relationship for the vesicle membrane in the presence of the hydrophobic ion. These results establish the time resolution for methods using the phosphonium ion as a probe of time-dependent potentials across vesicle membranes, as well as provide fundamental information regarding the binding and transport of hydrophobic cations across bilayers. This latter point is significant in view of the fact that hydrophobic cations have not been well characterized in planar bilayers due to their weak binding and low conductance.  相似文献   

20.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex I), the electron input enzyme in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and many bacteria, couples electron transport to proton translocation across the membrane. Complex I is a primary proton pump; although its proton translocation mechanism is yet to be known, it is considered radically different from any other mechanism known for redox-driven proton pumps: no redox centers have been found in its membrane domain where the proton translocation takes place. Here we studied the properties and the catalytic role of the enzyme-bound ubiquinone in the solubilized, purified Complex I from Escherichia coli. The ubiquinone content in the enzyme preparations was 1.3±0.1 per bound FMN residue. Rapid mixing of Complex I with NADH, traced optically, demonstrated that both reduction and re-oxidation kinetics of ubiquinone coincide with the respective kinetics of the majority of Fe-S clusters, indicating kinetic competence of the detected ubiquinone. Optical spectroelectrochemical redox titration of Complex I followed at 270-280nm, where the redox changes of ubiquinone contribute, did not reveal any transition within the redox potential range typical for the membrane pool, or loosely bound ubiquinone (ca. +50-+100mV vs. NHE, pH 6.8). The transition is likely to take place at much lower potentials (E(m) ≤-200mV). Such perturbed redox properties of ubiquinone indicate that it is tightly bound to the enzyme's hydrophobic core. The possibility of two ubiquinone-binding sites in Complex I is discussed.  相似文献   

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