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1.
X-ray structures of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase with bound respiratory inhibitors (O(2) analogues) have been determined at 1.8-2.05? resolution to investigate the function of the O(2) reduction site which includes two metal sites (Fe(a3)(2+) and Cu(B)(1+)). The X-ray structures of the CO- and NO-bound derivatives indicate that although there are three possible electron donors that can provide electrons to the bound O(2), located in the O(2) reduction site, the formation of the peroxide intermediate is effectively prevented to provide an O(2)-bound form as the initial intermediate. The structural change induced upon binding of CN(-) suggests a non-sequential 3-electron reduction of the bound O(2)(-) for the complete reduction without release of any reactive oxygen species. The X-ray structure of the derivative with CO bound to Cu(B)(1+) after photolysis from Fe(a3)(2+) demonstrates weak side-on binding. This suggests that Cu(B) controls the O(2) supply to Fe(a3)(2+) without electron transfer to provide sufficient time for collection of protons from the negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. The proton-pumping pathway of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase includes a hydrogen-bond network and a water channel located in tandem between the positive and negative side of the mitochondrial membrane. Binding of a strong ligand to Fe(a3) induces a conformational change which significantly narrows the water channel and effectively blocks the back-leakage of protons from the hydrogen bond network. The proton pumping mechanism proposed by these X-ray structural analyses has been functionally confirmed by mutagenesis analyses of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Allosteric cooperativity in respiratory proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome c oxidase dysfunction in oxidative stress   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is the terminal oxidase of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. This bigenomic enzyme in mammals contains 13 subunits of which the 3 catalytic subunits are encoded by the mitochondrial genes. The remaining 10 subunits with suspected roles in the regulation, and/or assembly, are coded by the nuclear genome. The enzyme contains two heme groups (heme a and a3) and two Cu(2+) centers (Cu(2+) A and Cu(2+) B) as catalytic centers and handles more than 90% of molecular O(2) respired by the mammalian cells and tissues. CcO is a highly regulated enzyme which is believed to be the pacesetter for mitochondrial oxidative metabolism and ATP synthesis. The structure and function of the enzyme are affected in a wide variety of diseases including cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, myocardial ischemia/reperfusion, bone and skeletal diseases, and diabetes. Despite handling a high O(2) load the role of CcO in the production of reactive oxygen species still remains a subject of debate. However, a volume of evidence suggests that CcO dysfunction is invariably associated with increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production and cellular toxicity. In this paper we review the literature on mechanisms of multimodal regulation of CcO activity by a wide spectrum of physiological and pathological factors. We also review an array of literature on the direct or indirect roles of CcO in reactive oxygen species production.  相似文献   

3.
The electronic structures of heme-dioxygen complexes have been studied as intermediate models of dioxygen reduction mechanism catalyzed by the mixed valence (MV) and fully reduced (FR) cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). Dioxygen, protons and electrons were sequentially added to the heme along the proposed reaction path for the O(2) reduction mechanism. The electronic structures of [FeOO], [FeOO](-), [FeOOH](+), [FeOOH], [Fe=O, H(2)O](+), [Fe=O](+) and [Fe=O] were thoroughly investigated by using the unrestricted hybrid exchange-correlation functional B3LYP method. The additions of two protons and an electron to [FeOO] lead to the OO bond cleavage to produce a H(2)O molecule with the electron transfer from Fe(II) in heme to the OO moiety. It is shown that the intrinsic OO bond cleavage occurs by adding two protons and two electrons into the OO bond, indicating consistency with a H(2)O formation catalyzed by both MV and FR CcO. The study of the electronic structures of heme-dioxygen complexes gave the different proposals for the mechanisms of a H(2)O formation by both MV and FR CcO. For the mixed valence CcO, starting from the [FeOO] complex, the final products are single H(2)O molecule and compound I of the oxo heme. For the fully reduced CcO, the final products are single H(2)O molecule and compound II of the oxo heme which is a reduced state of the compound I.  相似文献   

4.
X-ray structural and mutational analyses have shown that bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) pumps protons electrostatically through a hydrogen bond network using net positive charges created upon oxidation of a heme iron (located near the hydrogen bond network) for O2 reduction. Pumping protons are transferred by mobile water molecules from the negative side of the mitochondrial inner membrane through a water channel into the hydrogen bond network. For blockage of spontaneous proton back-leak, the water channel is closed upon O2 binding to the second heme (heme a3) after complete collection of the pumping protons in the hydrogen bond network. For elucidation of the structural bases for the mechanism of the proton collection and timely closure of the water channel, conformational dynamics after photolysis of CO (an O2 analog)-bound CcO was examined using a newly developed time-resolved infrared system feasible for accurate detection of a single C=O stretch band of α-helices of CcO in H2O medium. The present results indicate that migration of CO from heme a3 to CuB in the O2 reduction site induces an intermediate state in which a bulge conformation at Ser-382 in a transmembrane helix is eliminated to open the water channel. The structural changes suggest that, using a conformational relay system, including CuB, O2, heme a3, and two helix turns extending to Ser-382, CuB induces the conformational changes of the water channel that stimulate the proton collection, and senses complete proton loading into the hydrogen bond network to trigger the timely channel closure by O2 transfer from CuB to heme a3.  相似文献   

5.
In cytochrome c oxidase, oxido-reductions of heme a/Cu(A) and heme a3/Cu(B) are cooperatively linked to proton transfer at acid/base groups in the enzyme. H+/e- cooperative linkage at Fe(a3)/Cu(B) is envisaged to be involved in proton pump mechanisms confined to the binuclear center. Models have also been proposed which involve a role in proton pumping of cooperative H+/e- linkage at heme a (and Cu(A)). Observations will be presented on: (i) proton consumption in the reduction of molecular oxygen to H2O in soluble bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase; (ii) proton release/uptake associated with anaerobic oxidation/reduction of heme a/Cu(A) and heme a3/Cu(B) in the soluble oxidase; (iii) H+ release in the external phase (i.e. H+ pumping) associated with the oxidative (R-->O transition), reductive (O-->R transition) and a full catalytic cycle (R-->O-->R transition) of membrane-reconstituted cytochrome c oxidase. A model is presented in which cooperative H+/e- linkage at heme a/Cu(A) and heme a3/Cu(B) with acid/base clusters, C1 and C2 respectively, and protonmotive steps of the reduction of O2 to water are involved in proton pumping.  相似文献   

6.
Zhao X  Yeung N  Wang Z  Guo Z  Lu Y 《Biochemistry》2005,44(4):1210-1214
The electrochemical properties of an engineered heme-copper center in myoglobin have been investigated by UV-visible spectroelectrochemistry. In the cyanide-bridged, spin-coupled heme-copper center in an engineered myoglobin, the presence of Zn(II) in the Cu(B) center raises the heme reduction potential from -85 to 49 mV vs NHE. However, in the cyanide-free, spin-decoupled derivative of the same protein, the presence of Zn(II) in the Cu(B) center exerts little influence on the heme reduction potentials (77 and 80 mV vs NHE, respectively, in the absence and in the presence of Zn(II)). Similar trends have also been observed when copper ion is present in the Cu(B) center, although on a smaller scale, due to reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) prior to heme reduction. These results show that the presence of a metal ion in the designed Cu(B) center has a significant effect on the redox potential of heme Fe only when the two metal centers are coupled through a bridging ligand between the two metal centers, indicating that spin coupling plays an important role in redox potential regulation. In addition, the presence of a single positively charged Cu(I) center in the Cu(B) center resulted in a much lower increase (16 mV) in heme reduction potential than that of two positively charged Zn(II) (118 mV). Therefore, the heme reduction potential must be lowered after the first electron transfer to reduce heme Fe(3+)-Cu(B)(2+) to Fe(3+)-Cu(B)(+). To raise the heme reduction potential to make the second electron transfer (i.e., reduction of Fe(3+)-Cu(B)(+) to Fe(2+)-Cu(B)(+)) to be favorable, most likely a proton or decoupling of the heme-copper center is needed in the heme-copper site. These findings provide a strong argument for a thermodynamic driving force basis for redox-regulated proton transfer in heme-copper oxidases.  相似文献   

7.
Uchida T  Mogi T  Kitagawa T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(22):6669-6678
Cytochrome bo from Escherichia coli, a member of the heme-copper terminal oxidase superfamily, physiologically catalyzes reduction of O(2) by quinols and simultaneously translocates protons across the cytoplasmic membrane. The reaction of its ferric pulsed form with hydrogen peroxide was investigated with steady-state resonance Raman spectroscopy using a homemade microcirculating system. Three oxygen-isotope-sensitive Raman bands were observed at 805/X, 783/753, and (767)/730 cm(-)(1) for intermediates derived from H(2)(16)O(2)/H(2)(18)O(2). The experiments using H(2)(16)O(18)O yielded no new bands, indicating that all the bands arose from the Fe=O stretching (nu(Fe)(=)(O)) mode. Among them, the intensity of the 805/X cm(-)(1) pair increased at higher pH, and the species giving rise to this band seemed to correspond to the P intermediate of bovine cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) on the basis of the reported fact that the P intermediate of cytochrome bo appeared prior to the formation of the F species at higher pH. For this intermediate, a Raman band assignable to the C-O stretching mode of a tyrosyl radical was deduced at 1489 cm(-)(1) from difference spectra. This suggests that the P intermediate of cytochrome bo contains an Fe(IV)=O heme and a tyrosyl radical like compound I of prostaglandin H synthase. The 783/753 cm(-)(1) pair, which was dominant at neutral pH and close to the nu(Fe)(=)(O) frequency of the oxoferryl intermediate of CcO, presumably arises from the F intermediate. On the contrary, the (767)/730 cm(-)(1) species has no counterpart in CcO. Its presence may support the branched reaction scheme proposed previously for O(2) reduction by cytochrome bo.  相似文献   

8.
Parul D  Palmer G  Fabian M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(11):4562-4571
Three forms of cytochrome c oxidase, fully oxidized CcO (CcO-O), oxidized CcO complexed with cyanide (CcO.CN), and mixed valence CcO, in which both heme a(3) and Cu(B) are reduced and stabilized by carbon monoxide (MV.CO), were investigated by optical spectroscopy, MCD, and stopped-flow for the pH sensitivity of spectral features. In the pH range between pH 5.7 and 9.0, both heme a and heme a(3) in CcO-O interact with a single protolytic group. From the variation of the position of the Soret peak with changes in pH, a pK(a) of 6.6 +/- 0.2 was determined for this group. The pH sensitivity of heme a(3) is lost in the CcO.CN complex, and only heme a responds to pH changes. In MV.CO the spectra of both hemes are almost independent of pH between 5.7 and 11.0. The stoichiometry of proton uptake in the conversion of CcO-O both to MV.CO and to fully reduced CcO was determined between pH 5.8 and pH 8.2. Formation of MV.CO from CcO-O was accompanied by the uptake of approximately two protons, and this value was almost independent of pH. Full reduction of oxidized CcO was associated with the uptake of approximately 2 H(+) at basic pH, and this value increases with decreasing pH. On the basis of these proton uptake measurements, it is concluded that the pK(a) of the group is independent of the redox state of CcO. It is suggested that Glu60 of subunit II, located at the entrance of the proton conducting K-channel, is the protolytic residue that interacts with both hemes through a hydrogen-bonding network.  相似文献   

9.
Antalik M  Jancura D  Palmer G  Fabian M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(45):14881-14889
Internal electron transfer (ET) to heme a(3) during anaerobic reduction of oxidized bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied under conditions where heme a and Cu(A) were fully reduced by excess hexaamineruthenium. The data show that ET to heme a(3) is controlled by the state of ionization of a single protolytic residue with a pK(a) of 6.5 +/- 0.2. On the basis of the view that ET to the catalytic site is limited by coupled proton transfer, this pK(a) was attributed to Glu60 which is located at the entrance of the proton-conducting K channel on the matrix side of CcO. It is proposed that Glu60 controls proton entry into the channel. However, even with this channel open, there is the second factor that regulates ET, and this is ascribed to the rate of proton diffusion in the channel. In addition, it is concluded that proton transfer in the K channel is reversibly inhibited by the detergent Triton X-100. It is also found that the rate of ET to heme a(3) in the as-isolated resting enzyme and in CcO "activated" by reaction of fully reduced enzyme with O(2) is the same, implying that the catalytic sites of these two forms of oxidized enzyme are essentially identical.  相似文献   

10.
In cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), exergonic electron transfer reactions from cytochrome c to oxygen drive proton pumping across the membrane. Elucidation of the proton pumping mechanism requires identification of the molecular components involved in the proton transfer reactions and investigation of the coupling between internal electron and proton transfer reactions in CcO. While the proton-input trajectory in CcO is relatively well characterized, the components of the output pathway have not been identified in detail. In this study, we have investigated the pH dependence of electron transfer reactions that are linked to proton translocation in a structural variant of CcO in which Arg481, which interacts with the heme D-ring propionates in a proposed proton output pathway, was replaced with Lys (RK481 CcO). The results show that in RK481 CcO the midpoint potentials of hemes a and a(3) were lowered by approximately 40 and approximately 15 mV, respectively, which stabilizes the reduced state of Cu(A) during reaction of the reduced CcO with O(2). In addition, while the pH dependence of the F --> O rate in wild-type CcO is determined by the protonation state of two protonatable groups with pK(a) values of 6.3 and 9.4, only the high-pK(a) group influences this rate in RK481 CcO. The results indicate that the protonation state of the Arg481 heme a(3) D-ring propionate cluster having a pK(a) of approximately 6.3 modulates the rate of internal electron transfer and may act as an acceptor of pumped protons.  相似文献   

11.
Structures of reaction intermediates of bovine cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) in the reactions of its fully reduced form with O2 and fully oxidized form with H2O2 were investigated with time-resolved resonance Raman (RR) and infrared spectroscopy. Six oxygen-associated RR bands were observed for the reaction of CcO with O2. The isotope shifts for an asymmetrically labeled dioxygen, (16)O(18)O, has established that the primary intermediate of cytochrome a3 is an end-on type dioxygen adduct and the subsequent intermediate (P) is an oxoiron species with Fe=O stretch (nu(Fe=O)) at 804/764 cm(-1) for (16)O2/(18)O2 derivatives, although it had been long postulated to be a peroxy species. The P intermediate is converted to the F intermediate with nu(Fe=O) at 785/751 cm(-1) and then to a ferric hydroxy species with nu(Fe-OH) at 450/425 cm(-1) (443/417 cm(-1) in D2O). The rate of reaction from P to F intermediates is significantly slower in D2O than in H2O. The reaction of oxidized CcO with H2O2 yields the same oxygen isotope-sensitive bands as those of P and F, indicating the identity of intermediates. Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy revealed that deprotonation of carboxylic acid side chain takes place upon deligation of a ligand from heme a3. UV RR spectrum gave a prominent band due to cis C=C stretch of phospholipids tightly bound to purified CcO.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with hydrogen peroxide has been of great value in generating and characterizing oxygenated species of the enzyme that are identical or similar to those formed during turnover of the enzyme with dioxygen. Most previous studies have utilized relatively low peroxide concentrations (millimolar range). In the current work, these studies have been extended to the examination of the kinetics of the single turnover of the fully reduced enzyme using much higher concentrations of peroxide to avoid limitations by the bimolecular reaction. The flow-flash method is used, in which laser photolysis of the CO adduct of the fully reduced enzyme initiates the reaction following rapid mixing of the enzyme with peroxide, and the reaction is monitored by observing the absorbance changes due to the heme components of the enzyme. The following reaction sequence is deduced from the data. (1) The initial product of the reaction appears to be heme a(3) oxoferryl (Fe(4+)=O(2)(-) + H(2)O). Since the conversion of ferrous to ferryl heme a(3) (Fe(2+) to Fe(4+)) is sufficient for this reaction, presumably Cu(B) remains reduced in the product, along with Cu(A) and heme a. (2) The second phase of the reaction is an internal rearrangement of electrons and protons in which the heme a(3) oxoferryl is reduced to ferric hydroxide (Fe(3+)OH(-)). In about 40% of the population, the electron comes from heme a, and in the remaining 60% of the population, Cu(B) is oxidized. This step has a time constant of about 65 micros. (3) The third apparent phase of the reaction includes two parallel reactions. The population of the enzyme with an electron in the binuclear center reacts with a second molecule of peroxide, forming compound F. The population of the enzyme with the two electrons on heme a and Cu(A) must first transfer an electron to the binuclear center, followed by reaction with a second molecule of peroxide, also yielding compound F. In each of these reaction pathways, the reaction time is 100-200 micros, i.e., much faster than the rate of reaction of peroxide with the fully oxidized enzyme. Thus, hydrogen peroxide is an efficient trap for a single electron in the binuclear center. (4) Compound F is then reduced by the final available electron, again from heme a, at the same rate as observed for the reduction of compound F formed during the reaction of the fully reduced oxidase with dioxygen. The product is the fully oxidized enzyme (heme a(3) Fe(3+)OH(-)), which reacts with a third molecule of hydrogen peroxide, forming compound P. The rate of this final reaction step saturates at high concentrations of peroxide (V(max) = 250 s(-)(1), K(m) = 350 mM). The data indicate a reaction mechanism for the steady-state peroxidase activity of the enzyme which, at pH 7.5, proceeds via the single-electron reduction of the binuclear center followed by reaction with peroxide to form compound F directly, without forming compound P. Peroxide is an efficient trap for the one-electron-reduced state of the binuclear center. The results also suggest that the reaction of hydrogen peroxide to the fully oxidized enzyme may be limited by the presence of hydroxide associated with the heme a(3) ferric species. The reaction of hydrogen peroxide with heme a(3) is very substantially accelerated by the availability of an electron on heme a, which is presumably transferred to the binuclear center concomitant with a proton that can convert the hydroxide to water, which is readily displaced.  相似文献   

13.
FixL is a heme-based O(2) sensor protein involved in a two-component system of a symbiotic bacterium. In the present study, the iron coordination structure in the heme domain of Rhizobium meliloti FixLT (RmFixLT, a soluble truncated FixL) was examined using Fe K-edge extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and resonance Raman spectroscopic techniques. In the EXAFS analyses, the interatomic distances and angles of the Fe-ligand bond and the iron displacement from the heme plane were obtained for RmFixLT in the Fe(2+), Fe(2+)O(2), Fe(2+)CO, Fe(3+), Fe(3+)F(-), and Fe(3+)CN(-) states. An apparent correlation was found between the heme-nitrogen (proximal His-194) distance in the heme domain and the phosphorylation activity of the histidine kinase domain. Comparison of the Fe-CO coordination geometry between RmFixLT and RmFixLH (heme domain of RmFixL), based on the EXAFS and Raman results, has suggested that the kinase domain directly or indirectly influences steric interaction between the iron-bound ligand and the heme pocket. Referring to the crystal structure of the heme domain of Bradyrhizobium japonicum FixL (Gong, W., Hao, B., Mansy, S. S., Gonzalez, G., Gilles-Gonzalez, M. A., and Chan, M. K. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 15177-15182), we discussed details of the iron coordination structure of RmFixLT and RmFixLH in relation to an intramolecular signal transduction mechanism in its O(2) sensing.  相似文献   

14.
Fabian M  Jancura D  Bona M  Musatov A  Baran M  Palmer G 《Biochemistry》2006,45(13):4277-4283
Purified bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) has been extracted from aqueous solution into hexane in the presence of phospholipids and calcium ions. In extracts, CcO is in the so-called "slow" form and probably situated in reverse micelles. At low water:phospholipid molar ratios, electron transfer from reduced heme a and Cu(A) to the catalytic center is inhibited and both heme a3 and Cu(B) remain in the oxidized state. The rate of binding of cyanide to heme a3 in this oxidized catalytic center is, however, dependent on the redox state of heme a and Cu(A). When heme a and Cu(A) are reduced, the rate is increased 20-fold compared to the rate when these two centers are oxidized. The enhanced rate of binding of cyanide to heme a3 is explained by the destabilization of an intrinsic ligand, located at the catalytic site, that is triggered by the reduction of heme a and Cu(A).  相似文献   

15.
Fabian M  Skultety L  Brunel C  Palmer G 《Biochemistry》2001,40(20):6061-6069
A comparison of bovine cytochrome c oxidase isolated in the presence and the absence of chloride salts reveals that only enzyme isolated in the presence of chloride salts is a mixture of a complex of oxidized enzyme with chloride (CcO.Cl) and chloride-free enzyme (CcO). Using a spectrophotometric method for chloride determination, it was shown that CcO.Cl contains one chloride ion that is released into the medium by a single turnover or by cyanide binding. Chloride is bound slowly within the heme a(3)-Cu(B) binuclear center of oxidized enzyme in a manner similar to the binding of azide. The pH dependence of the dissociation constant for the formation of the CcO.Cl complex reveals that chloride binding proceeds with the uptake of one proton. With both forms of the enzyme the dependence of the rate of reaction for cyanide binding upon cyanide concentration asymptotes a limiting value indicating the existence of an intermediate. With CcO.Cl this limiting rate is 10(3) higher than the rate of the spontaneous dissociation of chloride from the binuclear center and we propose that the initial step is the coordination of cyanide to Cu(B) and in this intermediate state the rate of dissociation of chloride is substantially enhanced.  相似文献   

16.
Ishikita H  Knapp EW 《Biochemistry》2005,44(45):14772-14783
In photosystem II (PSII), the redox properties of the non-heme iron complex (Fe complex) are sensitive to the redox state of quinones (Q(A/)(B)), which may relate to the electron/proton transfer. We calculated the redox potentials for one-electron oxidation of the Fe complex in PSII [E(m)(Fe)] based on the reference value E(m)(Fe) = +400 mV at pH 7 in the Q(A)(0)Q(B)(0) state, considering the protein environment in atomic detail and the associated changes in protonation pattern. Our model yields the pH dependence of E(m)(Fe) with -60 mV/pH as observed in experimental redox titration. We observed significant deprotonation at D1-Glu244 in the hydrophilic loop region upon Fe complex oxidation. The calculated pK(a) value for D1-Glu244 depends on the Fe complex redox state, yielding a pK(a) of 7.5 and 5.5 for Fe(2+) and Fe(3+), respectively. To account for the pH dependence of E(m)(Fe), a model involving not only D1-Glu244 but also the other titratable residues (five Glu in the D-de loops and six basic residues near the Fe complex) seems to be needed, implying the existence of a network of residues serving as an internal proton reservoir. Reduction of Q(A/B) yields +302 mV and +268 mV for E(m)(Fe) in the Q(A)(-)Q(B)(0) and Q(A)(0)Q(B)(-) states, respectively. Upon formation of the Q(A)(0)Q(B)(-) state, D1-His252 becomes protonated. Forming Fe(3+)Q(B)H(2) by a proton-coupled electron transfer process from the initial state Fe(2+)Q(B)(-) results in deprotonation of D1-His252. The two EPR signals observed at g = 1.82 and g = 1.9 in the Fe(2+)Q(A)(-) state of PSII may be attributed to D1-His252 with variable and fixed protonation, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Hydrogen bond networks, consisting of hydrogen bonded waters anchored by polar/acidic amino acid sidechains, are often present in the vicinity of the oxygen binding clefts of P450s. Density functional and quantum dynamics calculations of a O(2) binding cleft network model of cytochrome P450eryF(CYP107A1) indicate that such structural motifs facilitate ultrafast proton transfer from network waters to the dioxygen of the reduced oxyferrous species via a multiple proton translocation mechanism with barriers of 7-10 kcal/mol on its doublet ground state, and that the energies of the proton transfer reactant and constrained proton transfer products have an electronic and oxidation state dependence [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124 (2002) 1430]. In the present study, the origin of the oxidation state dependence is shown to have its roots in differential proton affinities while the electronic state dependence of the reduced oxyferrous heme has its origins in subtle differences in network topologies near the transition state of the initial proton transfer event. Relaxed potential surface scans and unconstrained proton transfer product optimizations indicate that the proton transfer product in both the singlet oxyferrous heme and the reduced oxyferrous heme species in a quartet state are not viable stable (bound) states relative to the reactant form. While the proton affinity of H(3)O(+) is sufficient for it to protonate both the oxyferrous and the reduced oxyferrous heme species, hydrogen bond network stabilized water is only capable of protonating the reduced oxyferrous form. This interpretation is substantiated by study of the NO bound reduced ferrous heme of P450nor, which is isoelectronic with the oxyferrous heme and has a similar proton affinity. Density functional calculations on a more extensive O(2) binding cleft model support the multiple proton translocation mechanism of transfer but indicates that the significant negative charge density on the bound dioxygen of the reduced oxyferrous heme species, in its doublet ground state, polarizes the associated hydrogen bond network sufficiently so as to result in short, strong, low-barrier hydrogen bonds. The computed O-H-O bond distances are less than 2.55 A and have a near degeneracy of the proton transfer reactant and initial (sudden) proton transfer products. These low-barrier hydrogen bond features, in addition to the finding of a (zero point uncorrected) barrier of 1.3 kcal/mol, indicate that proton transfer from water to the distal oxygen should be rapid, facile and may not require large curvature tunneling as originally suggested by use of a smaller model. An initial assessment of protonation of the reduced oxyferrous heme distal oxygen by a model of 6-deoxyerythronolide B (6-DEB) indicates it to be low barrier (3.8 kcal/mol) and exothermic (-2.9 kcal/mol). The combined results indicate the plausibility of simultaneous diprotonation of the distal oxygen of the reduced oxyferrous heme, leading to O-O bond scission, using the combined water network and 6-DEB substrate protonation agents.  相似文献   

18.
Photoacoustic calorimetry has been utilized to probe the thermodynamics accompanying photodissociation of the CO mixed valence form of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (COMV CcO). At pH's below 9 photolysis of the COMV CcO results in three kinetic phases with the first phase occurring faster than the time resolution of the instrument (i.e., < approximately 50 ns), a second phase occurring with a lifetime of approximately 100 ns and a third phase occurring with a lifetime of approximately 2 micros. The corresponding volume and enthalpy changes for these processes are: DeltaH1, DeltaV1 = +79 +/- 10 kcal mol(-1), +9 +/- 1 mL mol(-1); DeltaH2, DeltaV2 = -79 +/- 5 kcal mol(-1), -9 +/- 2 mL mol(-1); DeltaH3, DeltaV3 = +54 +/- 7 kcal mol(-1), +8 +/- 1 mL mol(-1). At pH's above 9 only one phase is observed, a prompt phase occurring in < 50 ns. The overall volume change is negligible above pH 9 and the enthalpy change is +29 +/- 5 kcal mol(-1). The data are consistent with the prompt phase being associated with CO-Fe(a3) bond cleavage, CO-CuB+ bond formation, Fe(a3) low-spin to high-spin transition and fast electron transfer (ET) from heme a3 to heme a followed by proton transfer from Glu242 to Arg38 on an approximately 100 ns timescale. The slow phase is likely a combination of CO thermal dissociation from CuB and additional ET between heme a3 to heme a. Interestingly, this phase is not evident above pH 9 suggesting linkage between CO dissociation/ET and the protonation state of a group or groups near the binuclear center.  相似文献   

19.
We have used EPR and FTIR spectroscopy in combination with (17)O and (15)N stable isotopes to investigate the mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). A high-spin state of heme a(3) was found in high yield by EPR, achieved upon turning over the enzyme until it was anaerobic, and shown to be a mixture of heme with a coordinated oxygen-based ligand and five-coordinate heme. Allowing the enzyme to consume (17)O(2) for a few milliseconds before freezing, we also showed that the product H(2)(17)O exits toward the external side of the enzyme, binding to the nonredox active Mg/Mn site en route. Specific (15)N labeling of histidine, in comparison with global (15)N labeling and unlabeled samples, allowed us to more definitively assign heme and histidine peaks in the electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectrum. Additionally, the assignment of heme bands affords a reliable method of spectrum normalization between samples, providing a more accurate comparison of the spectral features of bovine with bacterial cytochrome oxidase and revealing multiple differences between the two species.  相似文献   

20.
The reactions of RO(2)* radicals with Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+) were studied, R[double bond]H; CH(3); CH(2)COOH; CH(2)CN; CH(2)C(CH(3))(2)OH; CH(2)OH; CHCl(2)/CCl(3). All these processes involve the following reactions: Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)+RO(2)*<==>(H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+) K(1) approximately 250 M(-1); (H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)+H(3)O(+)/H(2)O-->Fe(H(2)O)(6)(3+)+ROOH+H(2)O/OH(-); (H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)+2Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)-->3Fe(H(2)O)(6)(3+)+ROH; 2 RO(2)*-->Products; RO(2)*+(H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)-->Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)+products. The values of k(1) and k(3) [reaction is clearly not an elementary reaction] approach the ligand exchange rate of Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+), i.e. these reactions follow an inner sphere mechanism and the rate determining step is the ligand exchange step. The rate of reaction is several orders of magnitude faster than that of the Fenton reaction. Surprisingly enough the K(1) values are nearly independent of the redox potential of the radical and are considerably higher than calculated from the relevant redox potentials. These results indicate that the ROO(-) ligands considerably stabilise the Fe(III) complex, this stabilisation is smaller for radicals with electron withdrawing groups which raise the redox potential of the radical but decrease the basicity of the ROO(-) ligands, two effects which seem to nearly cancel each other. Finally, the results clearly indicate that reaction (5) is relatively fast and affects the nature of the final products. The contribution of these reactions to oxidation processes involving 'Fenton-like' processes is discussed.  相似文献   

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