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1.
The reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by dithionite was reinvestigated with a flow-flash technique and with varied enzyme preparations. Since cytochrome a3 may be defined as the heme in oxidase which can form a photolabile CO adduct in the reduced state, it is possible to follow the time course of cytochrome a3 reduction by monitoring the onset of photosensitivity. The onset of photosensitivity and the overall rate of heme reduction were compared for Yonetani and Hartzell-Beinert preparations of cytochrome c oxidase and for the enzyme isolated from blue marlin and hammerhead shark. For all of these preparations the faster phase of heme reduction, which is dithionite concentration-dependent, is almost completed when the fraction of photosensitive material is still small. We conclude that cytochrome a3 in the resting enzyme is consistently reduced by an intramolecular electron transfer mechanism. To determine if this is true also for the pulsed enzyme, we examined the time course of dithionite reduction of the peroxide complex of the pulsed enzyme. It has been previously shown that pulsed cytochrome c oxidase can interact with H2O2 and form a stable room temperature peroxide adduct (Bickar, D., Bonaventura, J., and Bonaventura, C. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2661-2666). Rather complex kinetics of heme reduction are observed when dithionite is added to enzyme preparations that contain H2O2. The time courses observed provide unequivocal evidence that H2O2 can, under these conditions, be used by cytochrome c oxidase as an electron acceptor. Experiments carried out in the presence of CO show that a direct dithionite reduction of cytochrome a3 in the peroxide complex of the pulsed enzyme does not occur.  相似文献   

2.
Complex formation between cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome c perturbs the optical absorption spectrum of heme c and heme a in the region of the alpha-, beta, and gamma-bands. The perturbations have been used to titrate cytochrome c oxidase with cytochrome c. A stoichiometry of one molecule of cytochrome c bound per molecule of cytochrome c oxidase is obtained (1 heme c per heme aa3). In contrast, a stoichiometry of 2:1 was found earlier using a gel-filtration method (Rieder, R., and Bosshard, H.R. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 6045-6053). From the result of the spectrophotometric titration and from the wavelength position of the perturbation signals it is concluded that cytochrome c oxidase contains only a single binding site for cytochrome c which is close enough to heme a to function as an electron transfer site. The second site detected earlier by the gel-filtration method must be remote from this electron transfer site. Scatchard plots of the titration data are curvilinear, possibly indicating interactions between cytochrome c-binding sites on adjacent monomers of dimeric cytochrome c oxidase. The relationship between cytochrome c binding and the reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with ferrocytochrome c is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of altering the pH and electrical components of the membrane potential on the visible spectra and oxygen consumption rates of cytochrome oxidase vesicles were examined during steady-state respiration using cytochrome c as the substrate. Heme a was found to be 30-55% reduced in the presence of a membrane potential, becoming more reduced when the electrical gradient (delta psi) was abolished by valinomycin and more oxidized when the pH gradient (delta pH) was abolished by nigericin, with little increase (1.2-1.8-fold) in the rates of oxygen consumption in either case. When both gradients were eliminated, heme a reduction was close to initial levels, and activity was stimulated up to 8-fold. The magnitude of the changes in heme a reduction levels upon elimination of a gradient component was shown to be positively correlated with the magnitude of the respiratory control ratio of the vesicle preparation. Kinetic analysis of the dependence of oxidase activity on cytochrome c concentration indicated that changes in the Michaelis constant of the enzyme for its substrate are not a major factor in regulation by either delta pH or delta psi. These results suggest a dual mechanism for respiratory control in cytochrome oxidase vesicles under steady-state conditions, in which the electrical gradient predominantly affects electron transfer from cytochrome c to heme a, possibly by altering the reduction potential of heme a, while the pH gradient affects electron transfer from heme a (CuA) to heme a3 (CuB), possibly by a conformationally mediated change in the reduction potential of heme a3 or in the kinetics of the electron-transfer process.  相似文献   

4.
Electron transfer process in cytochrome oxidase after pulse radiolysis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The reduction of bovine heart cytochrome oxidase by the 1-methylnicotinamide (MNA) radical was investigated by the use of pulse radiolysis. With the decay of the MNA radical, the absorption at 445 and 605 nm, a characteristic to ferrous heme a of the oxidase, increased. The kinetic difference spectrum obtained was similar to that of the fully reduced minus the fully oxidized form of the oxidase, and was not different from that obtained in the reaction of the MNA radical with the mixed valence CO complex of the oxidase, where heme a3 is the CO-bound reduced form with heme a oxidized. This suggests that the absorption changes at 445 and 605 nm arise from the reduction of heme a, not heme a3. In order to elucidate the contribution of "visible" copper in this reaction, the absorption of the oxidase in the near-infrared region was measured. A decrease of the 830 nm band due to the reduction of visible copper was detected with a half-life of 5 microseconds. This absorption change obeyed pseudo-first order kinetics and its rate constant increased with the concentration of the oxidase. This suggests that the absorption change at 830 nm is followed by a bimolecular reaction of the MNA radical with visible copper of the oxidase. After the first phase of the reduction, the return of the 830 nm band corresponding to oxidation of the copper was observed with a half-life of 100 microseconds. Concomitantly, the absorption at 605 and 445 nm due to the reduction of heme a increased. The rates of oxidation of the copper were identical to those of the reduction of heme a and independent of the oxidase concentration. This suggests that the MNA radical reacts with visible copper of the oxidase with a second order rate constant of 1.5 X 10(9) m-1 s-1 and subsequently the electron flows to heme a by intramolecular electron migration with a first order rate constant of 1.8 X 10(4) s-1. An activation energy of the intramolecular electron transfer was calculated to be 2.8 kcal/mol in the range 4-33 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
6.
An enzyme complex with ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, cytochrome c oxidase, and ubiquinol oxidase activities was purified from a detergent extract of the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans. This ubiquinol oxidase consists of seven polypeptides and contains two b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, cytochrome aa3, and a previously unreported c-type cytochrome. This c-type cytochrome has an apparent Mr of 22,000 and an alpha absorption maximum at 552 nm. Retention of this c cytochrome through purification presumably accounts for the independence of ubiquinol oxidase activity on added cytochrome c. Ubiquinol oxidase can be separated into a 3-subunit bc1 complex, a 3-subunit c-aa3 complex, and a 57-kDa polypeptide. This, together with detection of covalently bound heme and published molecular weights of cytochrome c1 and the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase, allows tentative identification of most of the subunits of ubiquinol oxidase with the prosthetic groups present. Ubiquinol oxidase contains cytochromes corresponding to those of the mitochondrial bc1 complex, cytochrome c oxidase complex, and a bound cytochrome c. Ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity of the complex is inhibited by inhibitors of the mitochondrial bc1 complex. Thus it seems likely that the pathway of electron transfer through the bc1 complex of ubiquinol oxidase is similar to that through the mitochondrial bc1 complex. The number of polypeptides present is less than half the number in the corresponding mitochondrial complexes. This structural simplicity may make ubiquinol oxidase from P. denitrificans a useful system with which to study the mechanisms of electron transfer and energy transduction in the bc1 and cytochrome c oxidase sections of the respiratory chain.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of ionic strength on the one-electron reduction of oxidized bovine cytochrome c oxidase by reduced bovine cytochrome c has been studied by using flavin semiquinone reductants generated in situ by laser flash photolysis. In the absence of cytochrome c, direct reduction of the heme a prosthetic group of the oxidase by the one-electron reductant 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone occurred slowly, despite a driving force of approximately +1 V. This is consistent with a sterically inaccessible heme a center. This reduction process was independent of ionic strength from 10 to 100 mM. Addition of cytochrome c resulted in a marked increase in the amount of reduced oxidase generated per laser flash. Reduction of the oxidase at the heme a site was monophasic, whereas oxidation of cytochrome c was multiphasic, the fastest phase corresponding in rate constant to the reduction of the heme a. During the fast kinetic phase, 2 equiv of cytochrome c was oxidized per heme a reduced. We presume that the second equivalent was used to reduce the Cua center, although this was not directly measured. The first-order rate-limiting process which controls electron transfer to the heme a showed a marked ionic strength effect, with a maximum rate constant occurring at mu = 110 mM (1470 s-1), whereas the rate constant obtained at mu = 10 mM was 630 s-1 and at mu = 510 mM was 45 s-1. There was no effect of "pulsing" the enzyme on this rate-limiting one-electron transfer process. These results suggest that there are structural differences in the complex(es) formed between mitochondrial cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase at very low and more physiologically relevant ionic strengths, which lead to differences in electron-transfer rate constants.  相似文献   

8.
High and low spin complexes of ferric and ferrous heme a have been prepared and characterized spectroscopically. Bis(1-methylimidazole) heme a provides a good model for cytochrome a in both oxidation states while several spectral properties of cytochrome a3 can be reproduced by 1,2-dimethylimidazole heme a3. The visible absorbance spectra of these analogs account well for the absorbance spectra of oxidized and reduced cytochrome oxidase and support the conclusion (Vanneste, W. (1966) Biochemistry 5, 838-848) that cytochrome a provides the major contribution to the spectral changes in the 600 nm band upon reduction. The 655 nm band present in cytochrome oxidase appears to be a characteristic of high spin heme a+3.  相似文献   

9.
A novel method for initiating intramolecular electron transfer in cytochrome c oxidase is reported. The method is based upon photoreduction of cytochrome c labeled with thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate in complex with cytochrome oxidase. The thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-labeled cytochrome c was prepared by incubating the thiol reactive form of the dye with yeast iso-1-cytochrome c, containing a single cysteine residue. Laser pulse excitation of a stoichiometrical complex between thiouredopyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonate-cytochrome c and bovine heart cytochrome oxidase at low ionic strength resulted in the reduction of cytochrome c by the excited form of thiouredopyrene-3,6, 8-trisulfonate and subsequent intramolecular electron transfer from the reduced cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. The maximum efficiency by a single laser pulse resulted in the reduction of approximately 17% of cytochrome a, and was achieved only at a 1 : 1 ratio of cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase. At higher cytochrome c to cytochrome oxidase ratios the heme a reduction was strongly suppressed.  相似文献   

10.
I Ahmad  M A Cusanovich  G Tollin 《Biochemistry》1982,21(13):3122-3128
Laser flash photolysis has been used to determine the rate constants for the reduction of bovine cytochrome oxidase and the cytochrome c-cytochrome oxidase complex by the semiquinone and fully reduced forms of various flavin analogues (FH. and FH-, respectively). Under the condition used, the reaction of FH. with free cytochrome oxidase is too slow to compete with FH. disproportionation whereas FH- reacts measurably. Both FH. and FH- are effective in reducing the complex. The reduction of heme a in the complex is shown to proceed via cytochrome c, and a limiting first-order rate is observed in the case of FH- at high complex concentrations. The data indicate that the interaction site for electron transfer to cytochrome c is the same in the complex as with the free protein, and although a tight complex exists, at least small reactants like the flavins are not sterically hindered in their access to the bound cytochrome c. Moreover, the results also establish that intramolecular electron transfer between cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase within the complex occurs with a first-order rate constant of greater than 700 s-1. Thus, the presence of cytochrome c greatly enhances electron transfer from reduced flavins to cytochrome oxidase.  相似文献   

11.
The liganded derivatives of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase have been prepared in hydrated oriented multilayers of membranous cytochrome c oxidase. The optical spectra of the liganded derivatives recorded at an angle of 45 degrees between the incident light beam and the normal to the planes of the membranes in the multilayers show dichroic ratios of almost 2 in the visible region and 1.2-1.4 in the Soret region. The dichroic ratios were found to be similar for both cytochromes a and a3. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of the azide, sulfide, and formate complexes of cytochrome c oxidase obtained as a function of the orientation of the applied magnetic field relative to the planes of the membranes in the multilayer confirm the optical data and demonstrate that both hemes of cytochrome c oxidase are oriented such that the angle between the heme normal and the membrane normal is approximately 90 degrees.  相似文献   

12.
Carbon monoxide-driven reduction of ferric heme and heme proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Oxidized cytochrome c oxidase in a carbon monoxide atmosphere slowly becomes reduced as shown by changes in its visible spectra and its reactivity toward oxygen. The "auto-reduction" of cytochrome c oxidase by this procedure has been used to prepare mixed valence hybrids. We have found that this process is a general phenomenon for oxygen-binding heme proteins, and even for isolated hemin in basic aqueous solution. This reductive reaction may have physiological significance. It also explains why oxygen-binding heme proteins become oxidized much more slowly and appear to be more stable when they are kept under a CO atmosphere. Oxidized alpha and beta chains of human hemoglobin become reduced under CO much more slowly than does cytochrome c oxidase, where the CO-binding heme is coupled with another electron accepting metal center. By observing the reaction in both the forward and reverse direction, we have concluded that the heme is reduced by an equivalent of the water-gas shift reaction (CO + H2O----CO2 + 2e- + 2H+). The reaction does not require molecular oxygen. However, when the CO-driven reduction of cytochrome c oxidase occurs in the presence of oxygen, there is a competition between CO and oxygen for the reduced heme and copper of cytochrome alpha 3. Under certain conditions when both CO and oxygen are present, a peroxide adduct derived from oxygen reduction can be observed. This "607 nm complex," described in 1981 by Nicholls and Chanady (Nicholls, P., and Chanady, G. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 634, 256-265), forms and decays with kinetics in accord with the rate constants for CO dissociation, oxygen association and reduction, and dissociation of the peroxide adduct. In the absence of oxygen, if a mixture of cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase is incubated under a CO atmosphere, auto-reduction of the cytochrome c as well as of the cytochrome c oxidase occurs. By our proposed mechanism this involves a redistribution of electrons from cytochrome alpha 3 to cytochrome alpha and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

13.
The photoinduced linear dichroism of absorption changes resulting from photolysis of the complex between heme a3 of the cytochrome oxidase and CO is studied. The experiments started from isotropic solutions or suspensions of the enzyme both in its isolated form and in mitochondria. The anisotropy responsible for the linear dichroism was induced by excitation with a flash of linearly polarized light. The dichroic ratios observed with various systems; polymerized enzyme in solution, enzyme in mitochondria and in submitochondrial particles (at 20 degrees C as well as at liquid N2-temperature) all approached a value of 4/3 which characterizes a chromophore which is circularly degenerate. Therefrom we conclude that the interaction of heme a3 with its microenvironment within the protein does not break its four-fold symmetry. The experiments with mitochondria and submitochondrial particles suspended in aqueous buffer revealed similarly high dichoric ratios without any dichroic relaxation other than a rather slow one which could be attributed to the rotation of the whole organelle in the suspending medium. Therefrom we conclude that the cytochrome oxidase either is totally immobilized in the membrane, or that it carries out only limited rotational diffusion around a single axis coinciding with the symmetry axis of heme a3. In the light of independent evidence for a transmembrane arrangement of the oxidase and for the general fluidity of the inner mitochondrial membrane we consider anisotropic mobility of the cytochrome oxidase around an axis normal to the plane of the membrane as the most likely interpretation. Then our experimental results imply that the plane of heme a3 is coplanar to the membrane.  相似文献   

14.
1. By the application of the principle of the sequential fragmentation of the respiratory chain, a simple-method has been developed for the isolation of phospholipid-depleted and phospholipid-rich cytochrome oxidase preparations. 2. The phospholip-rich oxidase contains about 20% lipid, including mainly phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, and cardiolipin. Its enzymic activity is not stimulated by an external lipid such as asolectin. 3. The phospholipid-depleted oxidase contains less than 0.1% lipid. It is enzymically inactive in catalyzing the oxidation of reduced cytochrome c by molecular oxygen. This activity can be fully restored by asolectin; and partially restored (approximately 75%) by purified phospholipids individually or in combination. The activity can be partially restored also by phospholipid mixtures isolated from mitochondria, from the oxidase itself, and from related preparations. Among the detergents tested only Emasol-1130 and Tween 80 show some stimulatory activity. 4. The phospholipid-depleted oxidase binds with cytochrome c evidently by "protein-protein" interactions as does the phospholipid-rich or the phospholipid-replenished oxidase to form a complex with the ratio of cytochrome c to heme a of unity. The complex prepared from phospholipid-depleted cytochrome oxidase exhibits a characteristic Soret absorption maximum at 415 nm in the difference spectrum of the carbon monoxide-reacted reduced form minus the reduced form. This 415-nm maximum is abolished by the replenishment of the complex with a phospholipid or by the dissociation of the complex in cholate or in a medium of high ionic strength. When ascorbate is used as an electron donor, the complex prepared from phospholipid-depleted cytochrome oxidase does not cause the reduction of cytochrome a3 which is in dramatic contrast to the complex from the phospholipid-rich or the phospholipid-replenished oxidase. However, dithionite reduces cytochrome a3 in all of the preparations of the cytochrome c-cytochrome oxidase complex. These facts suggest that the action of phospholipid on the electron transfer in cytochrome oxidase may be at the step between cytochromes a and a3. This conclusion is substantiated by preliminary kinetic results that the electron transfer from cytochrome a to a3 is much slower in the phospholipid-depleted than in phospholipid-rich or phospholipid-replenished oxidase. On the basis of the cytochrome c content, the enzymic activity has been found to be about 10 times higher in the system with the complex (in the presence of the replenishedhe external medium unless energy is provided, and that  相似文献   

15.
16.
The first step in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome oxidase, the one-electron reduction of the fully oxidized enzyme, was investigated using a new photoactive binuclear ruthenium complex, [Ru(bipyrazine)2]2(quaterpyridine), (Ru2Z). The aim of the work was to examine differences in the redox kinetics resulting from pulsing the oxidase (i.e., fully reducing the enzyme followed by reoxidation) just prior to photoreduction. Recent reports indicate transient changes in the redox behavior of the metal centers upon pulsing. The new photoreductant has a large quantum yield, allowing the kinetics data to be acquired in a single flash. The net charge of +4 on Ru2Z allows it to bind electrostatically near CuA in subunit II of cytochrome oxidase. The photoexcited state Ru(II*) of Ru2Z is reduced to Ru(I) by the sacrificial electron donor aniline, and Ru(I) then reduces CuA with yields up to 60%. A stopped-flow-flash technique was used to form the pulsed state of cytochrome oxidase (the "OH" state) from several sources (bovine heart mitochondria, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Paracoccus denitrificans). Upon mixing the fully reduced anaerobic enzyme with oxygenated buffer containing Ru2Z, the oxidized OH state was formed within 5 ms. Ru2Z was then excited with a laser flash to inject one electron into CuA. Electron transfer from CuA --> heme a --> heme a3/CuB was monitored by optical spectroscopy, and the results were compared with the enzyme that had not been pulsed to the OH state. Pulsing had a significant effect in the case of the bovine oxidase, but this was not observed with the bacterial oxidases. Electron transfer from CuA to heme a occurred with a rate constant of 20,000 s-1 with the bovine cytochrome oxidase, regardless of whether the enzyme had been pulsed. However, electron transfer from heme a to the heme a3/CuB center in the pulsed form was 63% complete and occurred with biphasic kinetics with rate constants of 750 s-1 and 110 s-1 and relative amplitudes of 25% and 75%. In contrast, one-electron injection into the nonpulsed O form of the bovine oxidase was only 30% complete and occurred with monophasic kinetics with a rate constant of 90 s-1. This is the first indication of a difference between the fast form of the bovine oxidase and the pulsed OH form. No reduction of heme a3 is observed, indicating that CuB is the initial electron acceptor in the one-electron reduced pulsed bovine oxidase.  相似文献   

17.
A cytochrome in an extremely halophilic archaeon, Haloferax volcanii, was purified to homogeneity. This protein displayed a redox difference spectrum that is characteristic of a-type cytochromes and a CN(-) complex spectrum that indicates the presence of heme a and heme a(3). This cytochrome aa(3) consisted of 44- and 35-kDa subunits. The amino acid sequence of the 44-kDa subunit was similar to that of the heme-copper oxidase subunit I, and critical amino acid residues for metal binding, such as histidines, were highly conserved. The reduced cytochrome c partially purified from the bacterial membrane fraction was oxidized by the cytochrome aa(3), providing physiological evidence for electron transfer from cytochrome c to cytochrome aa(3) in archaea.  相似文献   

18.
Electrostatically stabilized complexes of fully oxidized cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans and horse heart cytochrome c were studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The experiments were carried out with the wild-type oxidase and a variant in which a negatively charged amino acid in the binding domain (D257) is replaced by an asparagine. It is shown that cytochrome c induces structural changes at heme a and heme a(3) which are reminiscent to those found in mammalian cytochrome c oxidase-cytochrome c complex. The spectral changes are attributed to subtle changes in the heme-protein interactions implying that there is a structural communication from the binding domain even to the remote catalytic center. Only for the heme a modes minor spectral differences were found in the response of the wild-type and the D257N variant oxidase upon cytochrome c binding indicating that electrostatic interactions of aspartate 257 are not crucial for the perturbation of the catalytic site structure in the complex. On the other hand, in none of the complexes, structural changes were detected in the bound cytochrome c. These findings are in contrast to previous results obtained with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase which triggers the formation of a new conformational state of cytochrome c assumed to be involved in the biological electron transfer process.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
In the reductive phase of its catalytic cycle, cytochrome c oxidase receives electrons from external electron donors. Two electrons have to be transferred into the catalytic center, composed of heme a(3) and Cu(B), before reaction with oxygen takes place. In addition, this phase of catalysis appears to be involved in proton translocation. Here, we report for the first time the kinetics of electron transfer to both heme a(3) and Cu(B) during the transition from the oxidized to the fully reduced state. The state of reduction of both heme a(3) and Cu(B) was monitored by a combination of EPR spectroscopy, the rapid freeze procedure, and the stopped-flow method. The kinetics of cytochrome c oxidase reduction by hexaamineruthenium under anaerobic conditions revealed that the rate-limiting step is the initial electron transfer to the catalytic site that proceeds with apparently identical rates to both heme a(3) and Cu(B). After Cu(B) is reduced, electron transfer to oxidized heme a(3) is enhanced relative to the rate of entry of the first electron.  相似文献   

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