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1.
The kinetics of reduction of free flavin semiquinones of the individual components of 1:1 covalent and electrostatic complexes of yeast ferric and ferryl cytochrome c peroxidase and ferric horse cytochrome c have been studied. Covalent cross-linking between the peroxidase and cytochrome c at low ionic strength results in a complex that has kinetic properties both similar to and different from those of the electrostatic complex. Whereas the cytochrome c heme exposure to exogenous reductants is similar in both complexes, the apparent electrostatic environment near the cytochrome c heme edge is markedly different. In the electrostatic complex, a net positive charge is present, whereas in the covalent complex, an essentially neutral electrostatic charge is found. Intracomplex electron transfer within the two complexes is also different. For the covalent complex, electron transfer from ferrous cytochrome c to the ferryl peroxidase has a rate constant of 1560 s-1, which is invariant with respect to changes in the ionic strength. The rate constant for intracomplex electron transfer within the electrostatic complex is highly ionic strength dependent. At mu = 8 mM a value of 750 s-1 has been obtained [Hazzard, J. T., Poulos, T. L., & Tollin, G. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2836-2848], whereas at mu = 30 mM the value is 3300 s-1. This ionic strength dependency for the electrostatic complex has been interpreted in terms of the rearrangement of the two proteins comprising the complex to a more favorable orientation for electron transfer. In the case of the covalent complex, such reorientation is apparently impeded.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The reaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The kinetics of electron transfer between the isolated enzymes of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c have been investigated using the stopped-flow technique. The reaction between ferrocytochrome c1 and ferricytochrome c is fast; the second-order rate constant (k1) is 3.0 . 10(7) M-1 . s-1 at low ionic strength (I = 223 mM, 10 degrees C). The value of this rate constant decreases to 1.8 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1 upon increasing the ionic strength to 1.13 M. The ionic strength dependence of the electron transfer between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c implies the involvement of electrostatic interactions in the reaction between both cytochromes. In addition to a general influence of ionic strength, specific anion effects are found for phosphate, chloride and morpholinosulphonate. These anions appear to inhibit the reaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c by binding of these anions to the cytochrome c molecule. Such a phenomenon is not observed for cacodylate. At an ionic strength of 1.02 M, the second-order rate constants for the reaction between ferrocytochrome c1 and ferricytochrome c and the reverse reaction are k1 = 2.4 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1 and k-1 = 3.3 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1, respectively (450 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.0, 1% Tween 20, 10 degrees C). The 'equilibrium' constant calculated from the rate constants (0.73) is equal to the constant determined from equilibrium studies. Moreover, it is shown that at this ionic strength, the concentrations of intermediary complexes are very low and that the value of the equilibrium constant is independent of ionic strength. These data can be fitted into the following simple reaction scheme: cytochrome c2+1 + cytochrome c3+ in equilibrium or formed from cytochrome c3+1 + cytochrome c2+.  相似文献   

3.
Electron transfer within complexes of cytochrome c (Cc) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) was studied to determine whether the reactions are gated by fluctuations in configuration. Electron transfer in the physiological complex of yeast Cc (yCc) and CcP was studied using the Ru-39-Cc derivative, in which the H39C/C102T variant of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c is labeled at the single cysteine residue on the back surface with trisbipyridylruthenium(II). Laser excitation of the 1:1 Ru-39-Cc-CcP compound I complex at low ionic strength results in rapid electron transfer from RuII to heme c FeIII, followed by electron transfer from heme c FeII to the Trp-191 indolyl radical cation with a rate constant keta of 2 x 10(6) s-1 at 20 degrees C. keta is not changed by increasing the viscosity up to 40 cP with glycerol and is independent of temperature. These results suggest that this reaction is not gated by fluctuations in the configuration of the complex, but may represent the elementary electron transfer step. The value of keta is consistent with the efficient pathway for electron transfer in the crystalline yCc-CcP complex, which has a distance of 16 A between the edge of heme c and the Trp-191 indole [Pelletier, H., and Kraut, J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755]. Electron transfer in the complex of horse Cc (hCc) and CcP was examined using Ru-27-Cc, in which hCc is labeled with trisbipyridylruthenium(II) at Lys-27. Laser excitation of the Ru-27-Cc-CcP complex results in electron transfer from RuII to heme c FeII with a rate constant k1 of 2.3 x 10(7) s-1, followed by oxidation of the Trp-191 indole to a radical cation by RuIII with a rate constant k3 of 7 x 10(6) s-1. The cycle is completed by electron transfer from heme c FeII to the Trp-191 radical cation with a rate constant k4 of 6.1 x 10(4) s-1. The rate constant k4 decreases to 3.4 x 10(3) s-1 as the viscosity is increased to 84 cP, but the rate constants k1 and k3 remain the same. The results are consistent with a gating mechanism in which the Ru-27-Cc-CcP complex undergoes fluctuations between a major state A with the configuration of the hCc-CcP crystalline complex and a minor state B with the configuration of the yCc-CcP complex. The hCc-CcP complex, state A, has an inefficient pathway for electron transfer from heme c to the Trp-191 indolyl radical cation with a distance of 20.5 A and a predicted value of 5 x 10(2) s-1 for k4A. The observed rate constant k4 is thus gated by the rate constant ka for conversion of state A to state B, where the rate of electron transfer k4B is expected to be 2 x 10(6) s-1. The temperature dependence of k4 provides activation parameters that are consistent with the proposed gating mechanism. These studies provide evidence that configurational gating does not control electron transfer in the physiological yCc-CcP complex, but is required in the nonphysiological hCc-CcP complex.  相似文献   

4.
S Hahm  B Durham  F Millett 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3472-3477
The reactions of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase with horse cytochrome c derivatives labeled at specific lysine amino groups with (dicarboxybipyridine)(bisbipyridine)ruthenium(II) [Ru(II)] were studied by flash photolysis. All of the derivatives formed complexes with cytochrome c peroxidase compound I (CMPI) at low ionic strength (2 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7). Excitation of Ru(II) to Ru(II*) with a short laser flash resulted in electron transfer to the ferric heme group in cytochrome c, followed by electron transfer to the radical site in CMPI. This reaction was biphasic and the rate constants were independent of CMPI concentration, indicating that both phases represented intracomplex electron transfer from the cytochrome c heme to the radical site in CMPI. The rate constants of the fast phase were 5200, 19,000, 55,000, and 14,300 s-1 for the derivatives modified at lysines 13, 25, 27, and 72, respectively. The rate constants of the slow phase were 260, 520, 200, and 350 s-1 for the same derivatives. These results suggest that there are two binding orientations for cytochrome c on CMPI. The binding orientation responsible for the fast phase involves a geometry that supports rapid electron transfer, while that for the slow phase allows only slow electron transfer. Increasing the ionic strength up to 40 mM increased the rate constant of the slow phase and decreased that of the fast phase. A single intracomplex electron transfer phase with a rate constant of 2800 s-1 was observed for the lysine 72 derivative at this ionic strength. When a series of light flashes was used to titrate CMPI to CMPII, the reaction between the cytochrome c derivative and the Fe(IV) site in CMPII was observed. The rate constants for this reaction were 110, 250, 350, and 140 s-1 for the above derivatives measured in low ionic strength buffer.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of reduction of wild type and several site-specific mutants of yeast iso-1 cytochrome c (Arg-13----Ile, Gln-16----Ser, Gln-16----Lys, Lys-27----Gln, Lys-72----Asp), both free and in 1:1 complexes with yeast cytochrome c peroxidase, by free flavin semiquinones have been studied. Intramolecular one-electron transfer from the ferrous cytochromes c to the H2O2-oxidized peroxidase at both low (8 mM) and high (275 mM) ionic strengths was also studied. The accessibility of the cytochrome c heme within the electrostatically stabilized complex and the rate constants for intramolecular electron transfer at both low and high ionic strength are highly dependent on the specific amino acids present at the protein-protein interface. Importantly, replacement by uncharged amino acids of Arg or Lys residues thought to be important in orientation and/or stabilization of the electron-transfer complex resulted in increased rates of electron transfer. In all cases, an increase in ionic strengths from 8 to 275 mM also produced increased intramolecular electron-transfer rate constants. The results suggest that the electrostatically stabilized 1:1 complex is not optimized for electron transfer and that by neutralization of key positively charged residues, or by an increase in the ionic strength thereby masking the ionic interactions, the two proteins can orient themselves to allow the formation of a more efficient electron-transfer complex.  相似文献   

6.
Nakani S  Vitello LB  Erman JE 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14371-14378
Four covalent complexes between recombinant yeast cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase (rCcP) were synthesized via disulfide bond formation using specifically designed protein mutants (Papa, H. S., and Poulos, T. L. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 6573-6580). One of the complexes, designated V5C/K79C, has cysteine residues replacing valine-5 in rCcP and lysine-79 in cytochrome c with disulfide bond formation between these residues linking the two proteins. The V5C/K79C complex has the covalently bound cytochrome c located on the back-side of cytochrome c peroxidase, approximately 180 degrees from the primary cytochrome c-binding site as defined by the crystallographic structure of the 1:1 noncovalent complex (Pelletier, H., and Kraut J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755). Three other complexes have the covalently bound cytochrome c located approximately 90 degrees from the primary binding site and are designated K12C/K79C, N78C/K79C, and K264C/K79C, respectively. Steady-state kinetic studies were used to investigate the catalytic properties of the covalent complexes at both 10 and 100 mM ionic strength at pH 7.5. All four covalent complexes have catalytic activities similar to those of rCcP (within a factor of 2). A comprehensive study of the ionic strength dependence of the steady-state kinetic properties of the V5C/K79C complex provides evidence for significant electrostatic repulsion between the two cytochromes bound in the 2:1 complex at low ionic strength and shows that the electrostatic repulsion decreases as the ionic strength of the buffer increases.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c form a noncovalent electron transfer complex in the course of the peroxidase-catalyzed reduction of H2O2. The two hemoproteins were cross-linked in 40% yield to a covalent 1:1 complex with the aid of 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The covalent complex was found to be a valid model of the noncovalent electron transfer complex for the following reasons. The covalent complex had only 5% residual peroxidase activity toward exogeneous ferrocytochrome c indicating that the cross-linked cytochrome c covers the electron-accepting site of cytochrome c peroxidase. The residual peroxidase activity was almost independent of ionic strength indicating that the electron-accepting site is much less accessible even when ionic bonds between the two cross-linked hemoproteins are severed. The rate of reduction of heme c by ascorbate is 15 times slower in the covalent complex than in free cytochrome c and is independent of ionic strength. Although the covalent complex may not have been entirely pure with respect to the number and location of the cross-links, two major cross-links could be localized to within a few residues. One is from Lys 13 of cytochrome c to an acidic residue in positions 32, 33, 34, 35, or 37 of cytochrome c peroxidase, the other from Lys 86 of cytochrome c to a carboxyl group in the same cluster of acidic residues. The result stresses the importance of a peculiar stretch of acidic residues of cytochrome c peroxidase and of Lys 13 and 86 of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
1. The kinetics of the interaction of cytochrome c2 and photosynthetic reaction centers purified from Rhodobacter capsulatus were studied in proteoliposomes reconstituted with a mixture of phospholipids simulating the native membrane (i.e. containing 25% L-alpha-phosphatidylglycerol). 2. At low ionic strength, the kinetics of cytochrome-c2 oxidation induced by a single turnover flash was very different, depending on the concentration of cytochrome c2: at concentrations lower than 1 microM, the process was strictly bimolecular (second-order rate constant, k = 1.7 x 10(9) M-1 s-1), while at higher concentrations a fast oxidation process (half-time lower than 20 microseconds) became increasingly dominant and encompassed the total process at a cytochrome c2 concentration around 10 microM. From the concentration dependence of the amplitude of this fast phase an association constant for a reaction-center--cytochrome-c2 complex of about 10(5) M-1 was evaluated. From the fraction of photo-oxidized reaction centers promptly re-reduced in the presence of saturating concentrations of externally added cytochrome c2, it was found that in approximately 60% of the centers the cytochrome-c2 site was exposed to the external compartment. 3. Both the second-order oxidation reaction and the formation of the reaction-center--cytochrome-c2 complex were very sensitive to ionic strength. In the presence of 180 mM KCl, the value of the second-order rate constant was decreased to 7.0 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 and no fast oxidation of cytochrome c2 could be observed at 10 microM cytochrome c2. 4. The kinetics of exchange of oxidized cytochrome c2 bound to the reaction center with the reduced form of the same carrier, following a single turnover flash, was studied in double-flash experiments, varying the dark time between photoactivations over the range 30 microseconds to 5ms. The experimental results were analyzed according to aminimal kinetic model relating the amounts of oxidized cytochrome c2 and reaction centers observable after the second flash to the dark time between flashes. This model included the rate constants for the electron transfer between the primary and secondary ubiquinone acceptors of the complex (k1) and for the exchange of cytochrome c2 (k2). Fitting to the experimental results indicated a value of k1 equal to 2.4 x 10(3) s-1 and a lower limit for k2 of approximately 2 x 10(4) s-1 (corresponding to a second-order rate constant of approximately 3 x 10(9) M-1 s-1).  相似文献   

11.
The apparent bimolecular rate constant for the oxidation of dicyano-bis(1,10 phenanthroline) iron(II) by compound II of cytochrome c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome c; hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.5) has been measured over the pH range 2.5-11.0 at 0.1 M ionic strength, 25 degrees C, by the stopped-flow technique. An ionizable group in the enzyme, with a pKa of 4.5, strongly influences the electron transfer rate between the ferrous complex and the oxidized site in the enzyme. The electron transfer is fastest when the group is protonated, with a rate constant of 2.9 - 10-5 M--1 - s-1. The rate constantdecreases over three orders of magnitude when the proton dissociates. The apparent bimolecular rate constant for the oxidation of the ferrous complex by compound I of cytochrome c peroxidase was determined between pH 3.5 and 6. Under all conditions where this rate constant could be measured it was about three times larger than that for the oxidation by compound II.  相似文献   

12.
B C Hill  C Greenwood 《FEBS letters》1984,166(2):362-366
The reaction with O2 of equimolar mixtures of cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase in high and low ionic strength buffers has been examined by flow-flash spectrophotometry at room temperature. In low ionic strength media where cytochrome c and the oxidase are bound in an electrostatic, 1:1 complex some of the cytochrome c is oxidised at a faster rate than a metal centre of the oxidase. In contrast, when cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase are predominantly dissociated at high ionic strength cytochrome c oxidation occurs only slowly (t1/2 = 5 s) following the complete oxidation of the oxidase. These results demonstrate that maximal rates of electron transfer from cytochrome c to O2 occur when both substrates are present on the enzyme. The heterogeneous oxidation of cytochrome c observed in the complex implies more than one route for electron transfer within the enzyme. Possibilities for new electron transfer pathways from cytochrome c to O2 are proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Cytochrome c (horse heart) was covalently linked to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by using the cleavable bifunctional reagent dithiobis-succinimidyl propionate in 5 mM-sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. A cross-linked complex of molecular weight 48 000 was purified in approx. 10% yield from the reaction mixture, which contained 1 mol of cytochrome c and 1 mol of cytochrome c peroxidase/mol. Of the total 40 lysine residues, four to six were blocked by the cross-linking agent. Dithiobis-succinimidylpropionate can also cross-link cytochrome c to ovalbumin, but cytochrome c peroxidase is the preferred partner for cytochrome c in a mixture of the three proteins. The cytochrome c cross-linked to the peroxidase can be rapidly reduced by free cytochrome c-557 from Crithidia oncopelti, and the equilibrium obtained can be used to calculate a mid-point oxidation-reduction potential for the cross-linked cytochrome of 243 mV. Mitochondrial NADH-cytochrome c reductase will reduce the bound cytochrome only very slowly, but the rate of reduction by ascorbate at high ionic strength approaches that for free cytochrome c. Bound cytochrome c reduced by ascorbate can be re-oxidized within 10s by the associated peroxidase in the presence of equimolar H2O2. In the standard peroxidase assay the cross-linked complex shows 40% of the activity of the free peroxidase. Thus the intrinsic ability of each partner in the complex to take part in electron transfer is retained, but the stable association of the two proteins affects access of reductants.  相似文献   

14.
A new ruthenium-cytochrome c derivative was designed to study electron transfer from cytochrome bc1 to cytochrome c (Cc). The single sulfhydryl on yeast H39C;C102T iso-1-Cc was labeled with Ru(2,2'-bipyrazine)2(4-bromomethyl-4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyridine) to form Ru(z)-39-Cc. The Ru(z)-39-Cc derivative has the same steady-state activity with yeast cytochrome bc1 as wild-type yeast iso-1-Cc, indicating that the ruthenium complex does not interfere in the binding interaction. Laser excitation of reduced Ru(z)-39-Cc results in electron transfer from heme c to the excited state of ruthenium with a rate constant of 1.5 x 10(6) x s(-1). The resulting Ru(I) is rapidly oxidized by atmospheric oxygen in the buffer. The yield of photooxidized heme c is 20% in a single flash. Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between reduced yeast cytochrome bc1 and Ru(z)-39-Cc at low ionic strength leads to rapid photooxidation of heme c, followed by intracomplex electron transfer from cytochrome c1 to heme c with a rate constant of 1.4 x 10(4) x s(-1). As the ionic strength is raised above 100 mM, the intracomplex phase disappears, and a new phase appears due to the bimolecular reaction between solution Ru-39-Cc and cytochrome bc1. The interaction of yeast Ru-39-Cc with yeast cytochrome bc1 is stronger than that of horse Ru-39-Cc with bovine cytochrome bc1, suggesting that nonpolar interactions are stronger in the yeast system.  相似文献   

15.
The long-distance electron transfer observed in the complex formed between ferrocytochrome c and compound I, the peroxide-oxidized form of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP), has been proposed to occur through the participation of His 181 of CCP and Phe 87 of yeast iso-1 cytochrome c [Poulos, T. L., & Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10322-10330]. We have examined the role of His 181 of CCP in this process through characterization of a mutant CCP in which His 181 has been replaced by glycine through site-directed mutagenesis. Data from single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies, as well as the visible spectra of the mutant CCP and its 2-equiv oxidation product, compound I, show that at pH 6.0 the protein is not dramatically altered by the His 181----Gly mutation. The rate of peroxide-dependent oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by the mutant CCP is reduced only 2-fold relative to that of the parental CCP, under steady-state conditions. Transient kinetic measurements of the intracomplex electron transfer rate from ferrous cytochrome c to compound I indicate that the rate of electron transfer within the transiently formed complex at high ionic strength (mu = 114 mM, pH = 6) is also reduced by approximately 2-fold in the mutant CCP protein. The relatively minor effect of the loss of the imidazole side chain at position 181 on the kinetics of electron transfer in the CCP-cytochrome c complex precludes an obligatory participation of His 181 in electron transfer from ferrous cytochrome c to compound I.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
A hypothetical model for the non-physiological electron transfer complex between cytochrome c553 (c553) and the flavodoxin (fld) from the sulphate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio vulgaris has been recently published [1] based on rigid-body docking and refined by molecular dynamics. In this study, the functional validity of this model is tested by looking at the role of electrostatics in the non-physiological interprotein electron transfer between the two proteins at different ionic strengths. The results are compared with the electron transfer between fld and cytochrome c from horse heart (hhc). Second-order rate constants (k2) were measured for both non-physiological systems at different ionic strengths: a complex, bell-shaped behaviour is observed for the k2 of the c553/fld redox pair with an optimum rate at I=58 mmol l(-1), whereas under the same conditions the k2 for hhc/fld decreased monotonically with increasing ionic strength. Results from the electron transfer kinetics are rationalised in terms of reorganisational effects of an ensemble of conformations of the electron transfer competent c553/fld complexes, consistent with the published model.  相似文献   

17.
(1) Using the pulse-radiolysis and stopped-flow techniques, the reactions of iron-free (porphyrin) cytochrome c and native cytochrome c with cytochrome aa3 were investigated. The porphyrin cytochrome c anion radical (generated by reduction of porphyrin cytochrome c by the hydrated electron) can transfer its electron to cytochrome aa3. The bimolecular rate constant for this reaction is 2 x 10(7) M-1 . s-1 (5 mM potassium phosphate, 0.5% Tween 20, pH 7.0, 20 degrees C). (2) The ionic strength dependence of the cytochrome c-cytochrome aa3 interaction was measured in the ionic strength range between 40 and 120 mM. At ionic strengths below 30 mM, a cytochrome c-cytochrome aa3 complex is formed in which cytochrome c is no longer reducible by the hydrated electron. A method is described by which the contributions of electrostatic forces to the reaction rate can be determined. (3) Using the stopped-flow technique, the effect of the dielectric constant (epsilon) of the reaction medium on the reaction of cytochrome C with cytochrome aa3 was investigated. With increasing epsilon the second-order rate constant decreased.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism of electron transfer catalyzed by cytochrome oxidase was investigated by monitoring the reaction of cytochrome oxidase with cytochrome c under carefully controlled anaerobic conditions. The kinetics of the reaction were examined by varying conditions of ionic strength, inhibitor binding, and oxidation-reduction potential. An analogue of cytochrome c in which the iron atom was replaced with cobalt was used to probe the effect of redox potential on the reaction. Under conditions of low ionic strength, there is very rapid oxidation of cytochrome c and reduction of oxidase which occurs at a rate of 3 X 10(7) M-1 s-1. The number of electrons transferred exhibit a hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of cytochrome c reaching a maximum of 2 electrons transferred at the highest concentration of reduced cytochrome c employed. The total number of electrons transferred was always observed to be distributed equally between cytochrome a and a second acceptor which appears to be the associated copper center; electron transfer to cytochrome a3 did not occur in the absence of oxygen. Substitution of cytochrome c by the cobalt analogue (which represents a decrease in oxidation-reduction potential of about 400 mV) yielded identical results indicating that the origin of the lack of reactivity of cytochrome a3 is of a kinetic nature. The effect of increasing the ionic strength on the reaction was 2-fold: a marked decrease in reaction rate and the appearance of biphasic kinetics with the amplitude of the very fast absorbance changes at 605 nm decreasing from 80% to 40% of the total anticipated from static absorbance measurements. Each of the two phases accounted for a maximum of 1 electron at the highest ionic strength employed. These results are simulated in terms of a sample kinetic reaction scheme involving a two-step electron transfer at one binding site.  相似文献   

19.
The binding of horse heart cytochrome c to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase in which the heme group was replaced by protoporphyrin IX was determined by a fluorescence quenching technique. The association between ferricytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated at pH 6.0 in cacodylate/KNO3 buffers. Ionic strength was varied between 3.5 mM and 1.0 M. No binding occurs at 1.0 M ionic strength although there was a substantial decrease in fluorescence intensity due to the inner filter effect. After correcting for the inner filter effect, significant quenching of porphyrin cytochrome c peroxidase fluorescence by ferricytochrome c was observed at 0.1 M ionic strength and below. The quenching could be described by 1:1 complex formation between the two proteins. Values of the equilibrium dissociation constant determined from the fluorescence quenching data are in excellent agreement with those determined previously for the native enzyme-ferricytochrome c complex at pH 6.0 by difference spectrophotometry (J. E. Erman and L. B. Vitello (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 225, 6224-6227). The binding of both ferri- and ferrocytochrome c to cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated at pH 7.5 as functions of ionic strength in phosphate/KNO3 buffers using the fluorescence quenching technique. The binding in independent of the redox state of cytochrome c between 10 and 20 mM ionic strength, but ferricytochrome c binds with greater affinity at 30 mM ionic strength and above.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction between cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated using sedimentation equilibrium at pH 6,20 degrees C, in a number of buffer systems varying in ionic strength between 1 and 100 mM. Between 10 and 100 mM ionic strengths, the sedimentation of the individual proteins was essentially ideal, and sedimentation equilibrium experiments on mixtures of the two proteins were analyzed assuming ideal solution behavior. Analysis of the distribution of mixtures of cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase in the ultracentrifuge cell based on a model involving the formation of a 1:1 cytochrome c-cytochrome c peroxidase complex gave values of the equilibrium dissociation constant ranging from 2.3 +/- 2.7 microM at 10 mM ionic strength to infinity (no detectable interaction) at 100 mM ionic strength. Attempts to determine the presence of complexes involving two cytochrome c molecules bound to cytochrome c peroxidase were inconclusive.  相似文献   

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